National Post

Oil falls on rising supply in U.S.

OPEC mulls deal to cut production

- JULIA PAYNE

LONDON• Oil prices dipped on Thursday after U.S. inventorie­s swelled to their highest level since December adding to concerns about a global crude glut but OPEC talk of an output cut limited losses.

Benchmark Brent fell 96 cents last trading at US$62.52 a barrel, edging back from a more than US$1 drop in early European trading. U.S. WTI fell more than a US$1 before easing back to settle down 78 cents at US$53.85.

Trading was thin due to Thursday’s Thanksgivi­ng holiday in the United States.

UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said oil was helped off its lows by a weaker U.S. dollar, making dollar-denominate­d crude cheaper for holders of other currencies. “Additional support has probably come from lower Iranian exports,” he said.

Iran’s exports have dropped by several hundred thousand barrels per day (bpd) this month, a leading

QUESTION IS WHAT OPEC WILL DO IN DECEMBER?

tanker-tracking company said on Thursday, suggesting U.S. sanctions that kicked in this month have scared off many buyers.

But prices remain under pressure from rising U.S. crude inventorie­s, which climbed by 4.9 million barrels to 446.91 million barrels last week, their highest since December, the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA) said.

U.S. crude oil production also stayed at a record 11.7 million barrels per day (bpd), the EIA said.

Tamas Varga, analyst at PVM brokerage, said the market trend remained bearish. “The question is what OPEC will do in December, will they cut, and if so, by how much?” he said.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is worried about a glut. But OPEC’s biggest exporter Saudi Arabia is under U.S. pressure not to take any action on cutting output that would push prices higher again.

More U.S. crude could be heading to market as U.S. pipeline bottleneck­s are cleared in the second half of 2019. Rising U.S. oil output has outpaced capacity to transport the extra crude.

To counter the surge in supply, OPEC is considerin­g a deal to cut production when it meets on Dec. 6, although OPEC member Iran is expected to resist any voluntary reduction. Russia, an ally of OPEC, has also shown no sign it would join any cut.

 ?? ANDREW BURTON / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? U.S. crude oil inventorie­s climbed by 4.9 million barrels last week to their highest since last December .
ANDREW BURTON / GETTY IMAGES FILES U.S. crude oil inventorie­s climbed by 4.9 million barrels last week to their highest since last December .

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