Oil moves mixed on easing lockdowns, looming storage
shortage
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[April 28, 2020] By
Bozorgmehr Sharafedin
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices were mixed on
Tuesday as optimism about the easing of coronavirus-related restrictions
reassured markets, although traders remained cautious with storage
capacities filling up fast and supply cuts not deep enough to counter
falling demand.
Brent crude <LCOc1> rose 41 cents, or 2%, to $20.40 a barrel at 1006
GMT, following a 6.8% slide on Monday.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude <CLc1> was down 78 cents, or
6%, at $12.00 a barrel. The contract plunged 25% on Monday.
"While wild price swings are set to last in the very near term, we see
more upside than downside from prices around $20 per barrel. The oil
price should recover in the longer term," said Norbert Rücker, analyst
at Swiss bank Julius Baer.
From Italy to New Zealand, governments announced the easing of
restrictions, although Britain said its too dangerous to relax a
lockdown for fear of a deadly second outbreak. More parts of the United
States looked set to restart business.
German retailers sought on Tuesday to persuade the government to let all
stores operate normally from May 4, saying the decision to only allow
smaller stores to open was confusing for customers.
"While we expect oil demand to modestly recover from the April lows as
countries ease some lockdown measures, demand will remain under severe
pressure in the near term because of the COVID-19 pandemic," said UBS
commodities analyst Giovanni Staunovo.
BP <BP.L> Chief Executive Bernard Looney told Reuters his firm expected
global oil demand to drop by about 15 million barrels per day (bpd) in
the second quarter due to coronavirus-related movement restrictions.
For a graphic on world population under lockdown, click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/dgkplkobvbx/jet2.JPG
That is more than the 10 million bpd of cuts agreed by the Organization
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Russia and other allied producers.
The reductions are due to be implemented from May 1.
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An oil pump jack pumps oil in a field near Calgary, Alberta, Canada
on July 21, 2014. REUTERS/Todd Korol
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said on Tuesday oil markets
would start balancing out once an output deal took effect, but no
significant rise in prices was likely in the near future due to high
levels of global storage.
Analysts said part of the WTI decline was due to retail investment
vehicles like exchange-traded funds selling out of the front-month June
contract and buying into months later to avert massive losses like last
week, when WTI fell below zero.
The United States Oil Fund LP (USO) <USO.P>, the largest oil-focused
U.S. exchange-traded product, said it would further shift its holdings
into later-dated contracts.
"The exodus in our view remains motivated by concerns over the
saturation of storage capacity at Cushing and the associated risk of
negative pricing," Harry Tchilinguirian, global oil strategist at BNP
Paribas, told the Reuters Global Oil Forum.
For a graphic on Cushing crude stockpiles surge, click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/rlgvdybepoj/cushing%20storage.PNG
Global storage onshore was estimated to be about 85% full as of last
week, according to data from consultancy Kpler.
In a sign of the energy industry's desperation for places to store
petroleum, oil traders are resorting to hiring expensive U.S. vessels to
store gasoline or ship fuel overseas, shipping sources said.
(Reporting by Bozorgmehr Sharafedin in London; Additional reporting by
Sonali Paul in Melbourne and Koustav Samanta in Singapore; Editing by
Edmund Blair and Alexander Smith)
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