Oil buckles as concern grows over battle of OPEC vs shale
Relentless rise in US oil production weighs on crude prices • Saudi Arabia: Do whatever it takes to balance markets
LONDON, May 9 (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on Tuesday, surrendering earlier gains, rattled by concern over slowing demand and the rise in US crude output that has shaken investors’ faith in the ability of OPEC to rebalance the market.
Brent crude futures were down 39 cents at $48.95 per barrel by 1400 GMT, off an intraday high of $49.72. US West Texas Intermediate futures were down 32 cents at $46.11 per barrel, off the day’s high of $46.78.
Weekly US data on crude production and inventories, plus monthly reports on supply and demand from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and the US Energy Information Administration this week, should provide a detailed picture of how quickly global crude inventories are falling.
“We really need to see some of the data starting to support the idea that global inventory levels are coming down,” Saxo Bank senior manager Ole Hansen said.
“Almost as importantly, there have been some signs that there has been some wavering in terms of demand growth.”
High US gasoline stocks have fed some concern about demand in the United States, where consumer spending expectations hit a three-year low last month and vehicle sales have fallen year-on-year for four months in a row.
Coupled with that is faltering manufacturing activity and a drop in commodity imports in China, the world’s second-largest economy and biggest raw materials consumer.
Even though OPEC has stuck to its pledge to cut production, US output has risen by more than 10% since mid2016 to 9.3 million barrels per day, boosted by the shale sector and close to the output of Russia and Saudi Arabia.
“US oil production surpassed expectations in terms of an early bottoming and swift uptick, and is set to expand further based on the latest drilling momentum,” said Norbert Ruecker, head of macro and commodity research at Julius Baer.
“We see prices between $4550 per barrel as fundamentally justified. Consequently, we have raised our view to neutral from bearish and closed our short position. An extension of the supply deal beyond June looks likely but its effectiveness will remain questioned.”
On the physical markets, barrels of North Sea crude changed hands at their lowest levels since late 2015 on Monday.
Top exporter Saudi Arabia said on Monday it would “do whatever it takes” to rebalance a market that has been dogged by oversupply for over two years.