Oil slumps but sets monthly gain ahead of OPEC meeting
Oil prices fell on Friday,
with U.S. crude dropping more than 4%, on fresh trade tensions and record
high U.S. crude production, but they still ended the month higher as OPEC
watchers expect an extension next week to a pact to throttle oil output
beyond March.
Brent crude futures LCOc1
settled down $1.44 at $62.43 a barrel, and was down 1.5% on the week. Still,
the contract posted its biggest monthly gain since April with a rise of about
6%.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI)
futures CLc1 settled down $2.94 at $55.17, falling off 4.1% on the week, after three consecutive increases. On a monthly basis, WTI is poised for a jump of
about 2.3%, its highest since June.
Trading volumes were low due
after Thursday’s U.S. Thanksgiving Day holiday.
Both benchmarks rose in
November partly on expectations of the United States and China reaching an
initial deal trade deal by the year-end, that could lift doubts over future
demand for crude, along with with it the health of the global economy.
However, that has started to
look less likely after China warned the United States on Thursday it would
take “firm countermeasures” in response to U.S. legislation backing
anti-government protesters in Hong Kong.
Prices have also been
supported ahead of next week’s meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies including Russia, as the group known as
OPEC+ is expected to extend existing oil output cuts until mid-2020.
Moscow is supporting Saudi
Arabia’s push for stable oil prices amid the listing of state oil giant Saudi
Aramco and next week’s gathering coincides with the planned announcement of
the final pricing for Aramco’s (2222.SE) initial public offering.
Investors, however, were also
eyeing whether the producer group would agree to deeper cuts.
“The bottom line is some
people are looking for OPEC+ to cut production, and I don’t think that’s
going to happen,” said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates in
Houston. If the cuts fall short of expectations or last only a few months,
the market will sell-off, he said.
OPEC+ agreed to reduce supply
by 1.2 million barrels per day in 2019 through to March as U.S. output
continues to climb to record levels.
OPEC’s share of that cut is
800,000 bpd among the 11 members participating in the deal. A Reuters survey
on OPEC output indicates that total OPEC output fell by 110,000 BPD in
November.
Russian oil companies on
Thursday proposed to keep their output quotas unchanged, putting pressure on
OPEC+ to avoid any major shift at the meeting over Dec. 5-6.
Crude prices have also faced
pressure from growing U.S. output, which in September rose to a new record of
12.46 million bpd from 12.397 million bpd in August, the government said in a
monthly report on Friday.
Oil supply from the North
Sea, where crude differentials have been hitting several-year highs [CRU/E],
is set to increase in January, sending a bearish signal. [O/LOAD]
A Reuters poll of 42
economists and analysts forecast Brent to average $62.50 a barrel next year,
little changed from last month’s $62.38 outlook, which was the lowest
prediction for 2020 in about two years.
The benchmark has averaged about $64 per barrel so far this year.
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