Oil rises as OPEC compliance eclipses boom in US output
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[February 01, 2018]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on
Thursday after a survey showed OPEC's commitment to its supply cuts
remains in place, even as U.S. production topped 10 million barrels per
day for the first time since 1970.
Brent April crude futures were up 53 cents on the day at $69.42 a barrel
by 1150 GMT, while NYMEX crude for March delivery rose 42 cents to
$65.15 a barrel.
Brent crude rose by 3.3 percent in January, its strongest start to the
year for five years, in line with a broad rise in other risk-linked
assets such as U.S. equities, which hit record highs last month and
marked their biggest January increase since 1997.
With investors now pondering which of oil's current key driving forces
will prove to be the dominant one - rising U.S. crude output, or OPEC's
adherence to its supply cuts, the relationship with equities and even
the dollar is likely to erode.
"I don’t think it’s durable, that suddenly we see oil and the S&P
attached at the hip. They have coincidentally done well and it's
profit-taking. But I think their fortunes are going to diverge and this
correlation won't survive the test of time," London Capital Group head
of research Jasper Lawler said.
"The other factor is that big $70 level in Brent. That is pretty much
the top of the range for most forecasts out there. So again, that’s a
price level that gives some pause for thought. I don’t think we should
go back to 60 but I think probably 65 seems like a logical area to ...
start refocusing on the fundamentals of the market versus general
sentiment."
Goldman Sachs raised its three-month forecast for Brent to $75 from $62
and its six-month forecast to $82.50 from $75.
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Storm clouds gather over Shell's Pulau Bukom oil refinery in
Singapore January 30, 2016. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oil prices are unlikely to advance much above $70 a barrel in 2018, given the
tug of war between OPEC and the U.S. shale industry, a Reuters poll showed on
Wednesday.
U.S. crude oil production in November surpassed 10 million bpd for the first
time since 1970, and neared the all-time output record, the Energy Information
Administration said on Wednesday.
The EIA also reported the biggest increase in crude oil stocks since March last
year, a rise of 6.8 million barrels.
"As oil prices rise, higher shale output is definitely on the market's mind,"
said Tomomichi Akuta, senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Research and Consulting
in Tokyo.
Output by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) also rose
in January from an eight-month low as higher output from Nigeria and Saudi
Arabia offset a further decline in Venezuela, a Reuters survey found.
However, adherence by producers included in the deal to curb supply rose to 138
percent from 137 percent in December, suggesting commitment is not wavering even
as oil prices hit their highest since 2014.
(Additional reporting by Osamu Tsukimori; Editing by Alison Williams)
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