Oil prices set for weekly loss on profit-taking
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[October 20, 2017]
By Ahmad Ghaddar
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on
Friday and were set for a weekly loss as investors sought to book
profits, despite tensions in the Middle East that have slashed supplies
of crude.
Brent crude was down 35 cents at $56.88 a barrel as of 1110 GMT. U.S.
light crude was 45 cents lower at $50.84.
"There's a little bit of profit-taking," said Olivier Jakob, chief
strategist at consultancy Petromatrix. "The market has really been
treading a small range all of this week without any true momentum."
Oil exports from Iraq's Kurdistan via the Turkish port of Ceyhan were
flowing at average rates on Friday of 216,000 barrels per day (bpd) down
from the usual flows of around 600,000 bpd, a shipping source said.
Iraqi troops regained control of two major oilfields northwest of Kirkuk
from Kurdish Peshmerga forces this week, and the oil ministry in Baghdad
expects to bring the fields back on stream on Sunday.
Russia's biggest oil company, Rosneft <ROSN.MM>, has agreed to take
control of Iraqi Kurdistan's main oil pipeline in a $1.8 billion
investment.
Jakob said the deal with Rosneft "makes it a bit harder for Baghdad to
do anything against those flows".
Despite the losses on Friday, analysts said the market was on a path
towards rebalancing.
"The oil market has moved into modest undersupply and we expect this
will persist at least through the end of the year," U.S. investment bank
Jefferies said.
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A man walks at a petrol station in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia October 8,
2017. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser
U.S. commercial stocks of crude oil have dropped 15 percent from their March
records, to 456.5 million barrels, below levels seen last year.
Part of this drawdown has been due to rising exports as a result of the steep
discount of U.S. crude to Brent, which makes it attractive for American
producers to export their oil.
Crude oil for immediate use now carries a premium over forward futures, making
it profitable to sell oil produced now rather than storing it for sale later.
Shipping data in Thomson Reuters Eikon shows that overseas U.S. crude oil
shipments have soared from virtually zero before the government loosened export
restrictions in late 2015 to around 2.6 million bpd in October.
"While outbound shipments recently approached 2 million bpd, our math suggests
that physical bottlenecks are unlikely to kick in until waterborne exports
approach 3.2 million bpd," RBC Capital Markets said.
(Writing by Christopher Johnson in London; Additional reporting by Henning
Gloystein and Vidya Ranganathan in Singapore; editing by Dale Hudson and Jason
Neely)
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