Oil prices slip, slow progress in trade talks counters
OPEC cuts
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[February 11, 2019]
By Noah Browning
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on
Monday as an uptick in U.S. drilling and concerns about demand due to
the slow progress in U.S.-Chinese trade talks overshadowed support from
OPEC-led supply restraint.
Benchmark Brent oil fell 16 cents or 0.26 percent to $61.94 a barrel at
1220 GMT.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude fell 41 cents or 0.78 percent
to $52.31.
"Oil prices are still trying to figure out what lead to follow. On the
one hand, there is the OPEC+ cut story, now coupled with increasing
issues around Venezuelan supply", Vienna-based consultancy JBC Energy
said.
"At the same time, it has to be argued that a lot of the economic data
that has been released over the last few days has really not been too
encouraging, and U.S.-Chinese trade talks are also seemingly not
progressing very fast."
Energy firms in the United States last week increased the number of oil
rigs operating for the second time in three weeks, pointing to a further
rise in U.S. crude production, a weekly report by Baker Hughes said on
Friday.
WTI prices were also weighed down by the closure of the second largest
crude distillation unit (CDU) at Phillips 66's Wood River, Illinois,
refinery following a fire on Sunday.
Trade talks between Washington and Beijing resume this week with a
delegation of U.S. officials traveling to China for the next round of
negotiations.
The United States has threatened to increase tariffs already imposed on
goods from China on March 1 if the trade talks do not produce an
agreement.
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An oil pump jack pumps
oil in a field near Calgary, Alberta, Canada on July 21, 2014.
REUTERS/Todd Korol/File Photo
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday he did not plan to meet with
Chinese President Xi Jinping before the March 1 deadline, dampening hopes of a
quick trade pact.
Prices have been buoyed, however, by output curbs from the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, including Russia, a group known as
OPEC+.
The deal, effective from January, aims to cut 1.2 million bpd until the end of
June to forestall an overhang, in a move producers and many analysts expect to
soon help balance supply and demand.
Suhail Al Mazrouei, the Energy Minister of the United Arab Emirates, said on
Monday the oil market should achieve this balance in the first quarter of 2019.
OPEC and its allies meet on April 17 and 18 in Vienna to review the agreement.
U.S. sanctions on Venezuela, along with older sanctions on fellow OPEC member
Iran, have also prevented crude prices from falling further.
(Reporting by Noah Browning; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise; Additional
reporting by Henning Gloystein; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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