Oil prices fall more than 2% as investors skeptical of OPEC+ cuts
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[December 02, 2023] By
Nicole Jao
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Oil prices slumped more than 2% on Friday on
investor skepticism about the depth of OPEC+ supply cuts and concern
about sluggish global manufacturing activity.
Brent crude futures for February settled down $1.98, or 2.45%, at $78.88
a barrel.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures (WTI) dropped $1.89, or
2.49%, to $74.07 a barrel.
For the week, Brent posted a decline of about 2.1%, while WTI lost more
than 1.9%.
OPEC+ producers agreed on Thursday to remove around 2.2 million barrels
per day (bpd) of oil from the global market in the first quarter of next
year, with the total including a rollover of Saudi Arabia and Russia's
1.3 million bpd of current voluntary cuts.
Traders viewed the announcement with some skepticism, OANDA analyst
Craig Erlam said.
"(It) seems traders either aren't buying that members will be compliant
or don't view it as being sufficient," Erlam added.
OPEC+, which pumps more than 40% of the world's oil, is reducing output
after prices fell from about $98 a barrel in late September on concerns
about the impact of sluggish economic growth on fuel demand.
The cuts "will not stop a billowing cloud of confusion that is going to
take the oil market weeks and months to figure out, and only if the
self-reporting data is indeed reliable," PVM analyst John Evans said.
The cuts agreed by OPEC+ on Thursday are voluntary, so there was no
collective revision of OPEC+ production targets. The voluntary nature of
the cuts led to some skepticism about whether or not producers would
fully implement them, and also from what basis the cuts would be
measured.
In the United States, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Friday
that the central bank would move "carefully" on interest rates as risks
of "under- and over-tightening are becoming balanced."
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An aerial view shows oil tanks of Transneft oil pipeline operator at
the crude oil terminal Kozmino on the shore of Nakhodka Bay near the
port city of Nakhodka, Russia June 13, 2022. REUTERS/Tatiana Meel/File
Photo
U.S. manufacturing remained subdued and factory employment fell in
November, according to a survey.
Investors are keeping a watchful eye on global manufacturing
activity, which remained weak during the month on poor demand,
surveys showed.
On Friday, talks to extend a week-long truce between Israel and
Palestinian militant group Hamas collapsed, prompting a resumption
in the war in Gaza. The conflict had initially supported oil prices
on concern that any escalation that involved surrounding oil
producers could disrupt supply. So far, the conflict has had no
significant impact on global oil flows.
On the supply side, the United States on Friday imposed additional
sanctions related to the price cap on Russian oil, targeting three
entities and three oil tankers.
U.S. oil rigs rose five to 505 this week, their highest since
September, energy services firm Baker Hughes said in its closely
followed report on Friday. [RIG/U]
Meanwhile, U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Friday called
for a future with no fossil fuel burning at all while speaking at
the two-week COP28 summit in the UAE.
Money managers cut their net long U.S. crude futures and options
positions in the week to Nov. 28 by 7,663 contracts to 62,070, the
U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) said on Friday.
(Reporting by Nicole Jao, Robert Harvey, Laura Sanicola and
Sudarshan Varadhan;Editing by Marguerita Choy, Jane Merriman, Will
Dunham, Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Daniel Wallis)
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