Oil heads for week of losses despite talk of supply cut
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[November 16, 2018]
By Shadia Nasralla
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil rose on Friday on
expectations that OPEC and its allies would agree to cut output next
month but prices were still down on the week on concerns that the global
market was oversupplied.
Brent was up $1.15 at $67.77 a barrel by 1150 GMT. The global benchmark
looked set for a third day of gains since hitting an eight-month low on
Tuesday. But it was still down more than 3 percent on last week's close.
U.S. light crude was up 90 cents at $57.36 after their steepest one-day
loss in more than three years on Tuesday.
Ministers from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
meet on Dec. 6 in Vienna to decide on production policy for the next six
months. They have to decide what to do about a growing surplus in world
markets.
The United States imposed sanctions on Iran this month, asking
international consumers not to buy its oil, and Iranian crude exports
have fallen sharply in recent months.
But other oil producers have more than compensated for the lost Iranian
oil and most analysts now see a significant supply surplus with
inventories building, putting pressure on prices.
"The trend is down - stick with it," PVM technical analyst Robin Bieber
said.
OPEC is widely expected to start trimming output soon, fearing a repeat
of the 2014 price rout.
This could produce a swift price rebound, some analysts say, especially
if production falls further in Venezuela and Libya.
"We are likely from December onwards to have at least 1 million barrels
per day (bpd) less of (Iranian) crude exports," Harry Tchilinguirian,
global head of commodity markets strategy at BNP Paribas, told Reuters
Global Oil Forum.
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A worker checks the valve of an oil pipe at the Lukoil company owned
Imilorskoye oil field outside the West Siberian city of Kogalym,
Russia, January 25, 2016. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Tchilinguirian said he would not be surprised if Brent recovered to $80
a barrel this year.
OPEC's de facto leader, Saudi Arabia, wants the cartel to cut output by
about 1.4 million bpd, around 1.5 percent of global supply, sources told
Reuters this week.
The Saudis would like Russia to cut output but Moscow has yet to commit
to joint action.
Iraq resumed exporting oil from its northern Kirkuk oilfields on Friday,
pumping 50,000-100,000 bpd, an oil ministry spokesman told Reuters. Some
analysts had expected the volumes to be much higher, at closer to
300,000 bpd.
While OPEC considers withholding supply, U.S. oil production reached
another record last week, at 11.7 million bpd, U.S. data showed.
The record output helped U.S. crude oil stocks to their biggest weekly
build in nearly two years.
(Graphic: U.S. oil output and storage - https://tmsnrt.rs/2PXBD8e)
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore and Christopher
Johnson in London; Editing by David Goodman and Edmund Blair)
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