Oil prices rise 2% but post weekly decline on demand fears
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[March 20, 2021] By
Jessica Resnick-Ault
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil rose more than 2%
in volatile trading on Friday, but finished the week about 7% lower as a
new wave of coronavirus infections across Europe dampened hopes that
fuel demand would recover soon.
Brent crude settled up $1.25 a barrel, or 2%, at $64.53 a barrel. West
Texas Intermediate (WTI) U.S. crude rose $1.42, or 2.4%, to $61.42.
During the session, both traded within a wide range of more than $2 a
barrel. The weekly loss for both benchmarks was just under 7%.
On Thursday, oil slid 7% as large European economies reimposed
lockdowns, while vaccination programs there were slowed by distribution
issues and fears of side effects.
Prices rose on Friday as many market players viewed the sell-off as
overdone.
"The sell-off is going to put into motion some things that could have
slowed the rally," said Phil Flynn, senior analyst at Price Futures
Group in Chicago. "OPEC is going to be more concerned about COVID, so
this increases the odds that they will extend production cuts yet again,
and with the sharp drop in the price of oil, it might reduce the
incentive of the U.S. shale producers to get ahead of their skis."
U.S. shale production has swelled global oil supplies as fuel demand
cratered during the pandemic. U.S. drillers added nine oil rigs in this
week, the biggest weekly increase since January, oil services firm Baker
Hughes said.[RIG/U]
Concerns about vaccine rollouts capped oil's gains.
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French oil giant
Total Refinery is seen during sunset in Donges, France, November 30,
2020. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
Germany, France and other countries have announced resumption of inoculations
with the AstraZeneca shot after regulators declared that vaccine safe. But the
earlier halt has made it harder to overcome resistance to vaccines.
Britain announced it would have to slow its COVID-19 vaccine rollout next month
because of a supply delay.
Goldman Sachs said oil market headwinds related to European Union demand and
Iran supply would slow market rebalancing in the second quarter, though it
expects the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies to act
to offset that.
Iran has moved record amounts of crude oil to top client China in recent months
while India's state refiners have added Iranian oil to their annual import plans
on the assumption that U.S. sanctions on the OPEC supplier will soon ease.
Goldman expects a significant increase in global oil demand in the coming
months, lifting its Brent price forecast to $80 a barrel this summer.
Hedge funds and other money managers raised their net long U.S. crude futures
and options positions in the latest week, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) said. [AQN03XYUH]
(Additional reporting by Ahmad Ghaddar in London, Shu Zhang in Singapore and
Aaron Sheldrick in Tokyo; Editing by Marguerita Choy, Frances Kerry and David
Gregorio)
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