Oil prices ease as speculators grow impatient
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[October 03, 2017]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil edged lower on
Tuesday, as speculators took profits on some large positions that have
built up in the last couple of weeks, but the prospect of gradually
ebbing oversupply lent support.
December Brent crude futures were down 7 cents at $58.05 a barrel at
1045 GMT, having lost almost 2.5 percent on Monday. U.S. crude futures
were down 7 cents at $50.51.
Brent notched up a third-quarter gain of about 20 percent, the biggest
increase for that quarter since 2004, and traded as high as $59.49 last
week, but has since fallen about 6 percent.
Money managers have pushed their bullish bets on the Brent crude market
to a record high in the last week, encouraged by signs of rebalancing
between supply and demand. [O/ICE]
But when positioning becomes too stretched, this can lead to abrupt
shifts in the price.
"It's always problematic when you have this amount of speculative length
in the market," Petromatrix strategist Olivier Jakob said.
"The price action ... for me is all about positions and potentially
profit-taking on some of those speculative positions."
Oil prices climbed last week on tension in Iraqi Kurdistan after the
region's independence vote, with Turkey threatening to close a pipeline
that brings oil from the region in northern Iraq to the Mediterranean.
[to top of second column] |
: A pumpjack brings oil to the surface in the Monterey Shale,
California, April 29, 2013. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
Turkey has not carried out the threat, analysts said.
The recent rally had also been driven by signs that a three-year crude glut is
easing, helped by a production-cutting deal among global producers led by OPEC.
However, Middle Eastern oil producers are concerned the price rise will stir
U.S. shale producers into more drilling and push prices lower again. Key OPEC
producers consider a price above $60 as encouraging too much shale output.
"The fourth quarter is not too kind to the price of oil, as we switch from
summer demand to expectations of winter demand," said Jonathan Barratt, chief
investment officer at Ayers Alliance in Sydney.
"A lot of (refinery) maintenance occurs at this time so feeder demand is not
there."
Offering a small boost was the expected drop in supply next month of the four
largest North Sea crude grades that underpin the dated Brent benchmark.
Output of Brent, Forties, Oseberg and Ekofisk will average 800,000 barrels per
day (bpd) next month, down from 870,000 bpd in October, and down 10 percent
year-on-year.
(Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Dale Hudson)
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