The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Oil futures continue to slide before data dump from US to Opec

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HONG KONG: Oil’s losing its grip on the highest price in more than three years before a raft of inventory and production data from the US government to the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec).

Figures from the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion today are forecast to show weekly US stockpiles fell for a ninth week, while Opec’s monthly report the same day will provide a snapshot on compliance to the supply pact with Russia.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency follows Friday with its own take on the state of the market.

Futures decreased 0.2% New York after slipping 0.9% on Tuesday as technical indi- cators showed prices are overbought.

While oil closed lower on Tuesday for the first time in more than a week, prices have extended a two-year gain as Opec and its allies including Russia trim output to drain a global glut.

Banks from Citigroup Inc to Societe Generale SA have started to speculate the supply deal may end early, but Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said in Moscow that cuts should continue and there is no need to make hasty decisions after recent price gains.

“The downward move was a potential warning sign,” said Ric Spooner, a Sydneybase­d analyst at CMC Markets.

“If prices start to fall away from here and drop below the lows of the last day or two, that would give the evidence that we need from a chart point of view to suggest the pause is turning into a correction.

“However, it would be hard to justify too much of a correction if we continue to see a drop in US inventorie­s and production climbs only slightly.”

West Texas Intermedia­te for February delivery was at US$63.62 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 11 cents, at 12 pm in Hong Kong.

Total volume traded was about 26% below the 100-day average.

There was no settlement on Monday because of the Martin Luther King Jr holiday in the US, and all transactio­ns were booked on Tuesday.

Brent for March settlement fell 14 cents to US$69.01 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange after losing 1.6% on Tuesday.

The global benchmark crude traded at a premium of US$5.45 to March WTI.

Demand growth, falling inventorie­s and strict Opec compliance to supply curbs have helped to underpin the recent price rise, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc, which predicts futures may exceed its forecasts. The bank sees “increasing upside risks” to its US$62 a barrel forecast for Brent and US$57.50 a barrel for WTI in the coming months, it said in a Jan 16 report.

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