Daily Trust

Oil starts year above $60 mark, highest since 2014

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Oil prices posted their strongest start to a year since 2014 yesterday, with crude rising to mid-2015 highs amid large antigovern­ment rallies in Iran and ongoing supply cuts led by OPEC and Russia.

US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude futures CLc1 traded broadly flat at around $60.40 a barrel by 1425 GMT after hitting $60.74 earlier in the day, their highest since June 2015.

Brent crude futures LCOc1, the internatio­nal benchmark, were also flat at around $66.80 a barrel after hitting a May 2015 high of $67.29 earlier in the day.

It was the first time since January 2014 that the two crude oil benchmarks opened the year above $60 per barrel.

“Growing unrest in Iran set the table for a bullish start to 2018,” the USbased Schork Report said in a note to clients yesterday.

Iran’s Supreme Leader yesterday accused the country’s enemies of stirring unrest as the death toll from anti-government demonstrat­ions that began last week rose to 21.

Iran is OPEC’s third largest crude producer. Iranian oil industry and shipping sources said protests have had no impact on oil production or exports so far.

“Geopolitic­al risks are clearly back on the crude oil agenda after having been absent almost entirely since the oil market ran into a surplus in the second half of 2014,” Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commoditie­s analyst at SEB, said, also citing Kurdistan and Libya.

Even without the unrest in Iran, which is a major oil exporter, market sentiment was bullish.

“Falling inventorie­s globally and strong economic growth offset the restart of the Forties pipeline and the resumption of production following a pipeline outage in Libya,” said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at futures brokerage Oanda in Singapore.

The 450,000 barrel per day (bpd) capacity Forties pipeline system in the North Sea returned to full operations on Dec. 30 after an unplanned shutdown.

Oil markets have been supported by a year of production cuts led by the Middle East-dominated Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and Russia. The cuts started in January 2017 and are scheduled to cover all of 2018.

US commercial crude oil inventorie­s have fallen by almost 20 percent from their historic highs last March, to 431.9 million barrels.

Strong demand growth, especially from China, has also been supporting crude.

However, rising US production, which is on the verge of breaking through 10 million bpd, is somewhat hampering the outlook into 2018.

“We think US tight oil production growth warrants close monitoring as it could spoil OPEC’s marketbala­ncing efforts, pushing the market into surplus in 2018,” Barclays Bank said.

US oil production C-OUT-T-EIA, driven largely by onshore tight shale oil fields, has risen by almost 16 percent since mid-2016, to 9.75 million bpd at the end of last year. Reuters

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