The Borneo Post

Oil prices mixed ahead of OPEC meeting

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Oil prices were mixed in Asia Wednesday as speculatio­n swirls that the OPEC oil cartel will maintain output at this week’s closely watched meeting despite a global supply glut.

US benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) for January delivery fell two cents to US$74.07 while Brent crude for January rose nine cents to US$78.42 in afternoon trade.

WTI dived US$1.69 Tuesday while Brent closed down US$1.35.

Crude prices have sunk 30 per cent to four-year lows since June on the back of plentiful supplies, a strong dollar and worries about stalling energy demand in a weak global economy.

“At the moment, the outcome of the OPEC meeting on Thursday is very much trumping all other factors,” Daniel Ang, investment analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore, told AFP.

“Prices have come under pressure after the meeting between some OPEC members and Russia saw no real concrete measures announced regarding production cuts,” Ang said.

Members of the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and non-member producers including Russia held talks Tuesday ahead of the cartel’s key output meeting on Thursday.

After the meeting, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Rafael Ramirez said all parties agreed that the current price of crude ‘is not good’.

“We discussed the situation on the market, we shared our points of view and we agreed to keep in contact, and we will meet again in three months,” he added.

Separately, Russian oil giant Rosneft said it had trimmed output by 25,000 barrels partly in response to sliding prices.

The token reduction represente­d less than one per cent of the behemoth’s total and did little to boost energy prices on depressed global commodity markets.

Thursday’s meeting in Vienna of OPEC, whose dozen members together pump out about one-third of the world’s crude, is its most significan­t in recent years.

The cartel is under pressure from its poorer members such as Venezuela and Ecuador to cut output after tumbling prices have slashed their precious revenues.

However OPEC’s Gulf members, led by kingpin Saudi Arabia, have rejected calls for a cut unless they are guaranteed market share in the highly competitiv­e arena, according to analysts. — AFP

 ??  ?? Oil prices were mixed in Asia as speculatio­n swirls that the OPEC oil cartel will maintain output at this week’s closely watched meeting despite a global supply glut. — AFP photo
Oil prices were mixed in Asia as speculatio­n swirls that the OPEC oil cartel will maintain output at this week’s closely watched meeting despite a global supply glut. — AFP photo

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