Oil slips as producer cuts fail to banish demand fears
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[April 14, 2020] By
Noah Browning
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices edged lower
on Tuesday, with investors apparently unconvinced that record supply
cuts could soon balance markets pummeled by the coronavirus pandemic,
though a predicted plunge in U.S. shale output provided some support.
Brent <LCOc1> futures fell 8 cents, or 0.3%, to $31.66 a barrel by 1045
GMT after settling 0.8% up on Monday. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI)
crude <CLc1> was down 36 cents, or 1.6%, at $22.05, having dropped 1.5%
in the previous session.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), along with
Russia and other producing countries - a grouping known as OPEC+ -
agreed over Easter to cut output by 9.7 million barrels per day (bpd) in
May and June, equating to about 10% of global supply before the
coronavirus outbreak.
Additional output cuts by the United States, the world's biggest
producer, and other nations outside the OPEC+ group will take the
estimated total reduction to about 19.5 million bpd.
"The voluntary OPEC+ cuts are a welcome support to oil prices, but they
do not fully offset the loss of demand related to COVID-19, and they
still need to be fully implemented in a timely fashion," BNP Paribas
analyst Harry Tchilinguirian told the Reuters Global Oil Forum.
The cuts at best provide a floor under prices in the short term,
Tchilinguirian added.
Oil prices remain more than 50% down this year.
Rystad Energy's head of oil markets, Bjornar Tonhaugen, said that
implementation of the international deal would be a logistical challenge
that would take weeks at least.
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Oil pump
jacks work at sunset near Midland, Texas, U.S., August 21, 2019.
REUTERS/Jessica Lutz
"Reducing upstream supply is not just turning off the tap or pushing a button.
We would be surprised to see overall OPEC+ compliance at 50% through May," he
said.
Inventories, where available, are expected to fill up fast even as some
countries among the G20 group of nations agreed to buy oil for their national
reserves.
Still, U.S. production is falling in tandem with a drop in prices and there are
signs that the coronavirus outbreak may have peaked in some areas of the world.
In China, where the virus started and is now largely under control, demand
appears to be returning, with data showing that crude oil imports rose 12
percent in March from a year earlier.
Supporting prices, U.S. shale oil output is expected to register a record
monthly drop in April, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said on
Monday.
Production has been sliding for several months, but the declines are expected to
accelerate sharply in April with a loss of nearly 200,000 bpd of production, the
EIA said.
(Reporting by Noah Browning and Aaron Sheldrick; Editing by David Goodman)
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