National Post (National Edition)

Oil jumps as Saudi cuts kick in, U.S. equities regain ground

Lower exports to U.S., China move market

- alex nussbaum and Grant smith

Oil prices rallied on the first trading day of 2019 as U.S. equities recovered from early losses and amid signs that Middle Eastern producers were fulfilling a pledge to cut exports.

Futures picked up where they had left off in a volatile 2018, with global benchmark Brent crude climbing five per cent to top US$56 a barrel in a mid-morning surge. West Texas Intermedia­te jumped as well, erasing earlier losses brought on by disappoint­ing manufactur­ing data out of China. The S&P 500 Index was little changed, reversing an early 1.6-percent drop.

Although the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies have pledged substantia­l output curbs to prevent an oil surplus from forming this year, investors’ skepticism helped drive prices to an almost 40-per-cent decline to end 2018. Traders worry any cutbacks won’t be deep enough to make way for booming supplies from Texas and other states driving the U.S. shale revolution.

“We’ve seen a couple of times where the market’s attempted to pick itself up and it seems the selling pressure always returns,” said Gene Mcgillian, market research manager at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Conn. “Until we see more evidence that fundamenta­ls in the market are not as weak as some think, I think we’re going to keep feeling that pressure.”

Crude exports from Saudi Arabia fell by a half-million barrels a day in December, led by lower flows to the U.S. and China, according to tanker tracking data compiled by Bloomberg, and the United Arab Emirates showed a decline as well. While the numbers are preliminar­y and could also reflect slowing demand, traders have been looking for signs that OPEC and its allies will follow through on plans to restrict global supplies.

“It looks like they are very much targeting inventory in the U.S., as that affects the high-frequency data that moves traders in or out of the oil market,” said Bart Melek, head commodity strategist at TD Securities in Toronto.

West Texas Intermedia­te for February gained $1.60 to US$47.01 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Ex- change recouping an earlier fall to near $44. Total volume traded Wednesday was about 29-per-cent above the 100-day average.

Brent for March settlement rose $1.75 to US$55.55 a barrel on the Londonbase­d ICE Futures Europe exchange, and traded at an $8.22 premium to WTI for the same month.

While U.S. President Donald Trump made positive noises about reaching a trade deal with his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping over the weekend, the Chinese data — and similar readings from across Asia — are a stark example that the protection­ist showdown is starting to have an impact on economic activity.

Trump, meanwhile, kept up his campaign to push prices down, boasting in a tweet Tuesday about low gasoline prices that he likened to a tax cut for consumers. He also signalled he wants to “make a deal” to break a stalemate that’s had part of the U.S. government shut down for 11 days.

 ?? MARK RALSTON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Traders worry any oil cutbacks won’t be deep enough to make way for supplies from the U.S. shale revolution.
MARK RALSTON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES Traders worry any oil cutbacks won’t be deep enough to make way for supplies from the U.S. shale revolution.

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