Business World

Oil jumps ahead of producers’ compliance meeting

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NEW YORK — Oil prices rose more than 2% on Friday on expectatio­ns that last weekend’s meeting of the world’s top oil producers would demonstrat­e compliance to a global output cut deal, but rising US drilling activity limited gains.

Members of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and some other producing countries including Russia will meet in Vienna this weekend to establish a mechanism to verify compliance with a deal to cut 1.8 million barrels per day ( bpd) of output, OPEC’s secretary general told Reuters.

Saudi Arabia’s energy minister said 1.5 million bpd had already been taken out of the market.

“The petroleum markets are moving higher in Friday trade on the latest round of positive talk about how much supply oil producers have taken offline ahead of Sunday’s review by OPEC and non- OPEC representa­tives in Vienna,” Tim Evans, Citi Futures’ energy futures specialist, said.

Brent crude ended the session up $ 1.33, or 2.50%, at $ 55.49 a barrel. US crude for February de- livery closed up by $1.05, or 2%, at $52.42 a barrel before expiring. The more active March contract settled up 2.10% at $53.22.

For the week, both contracts were largely unchanged. Prices pared gains after data from energy services firm Baker Hughes showed US drilling companies this week added the most oil rigs in nearly four years.

Swelling oil stockpiles in the US and rising shale production could threaten market rebalancin­g, analysts said.

“For a lasting balance to be restored on the oil market and the very high stocks reduced, the agreement will need to be strictly implemente­d over a considerab­le period of time,” Commerzban­k said in a note. “This is particular­ly true given that US oil production is rising again and given that the oil supply from Libya and Nigeria may be expanded.”

US crude inventorie­s unexpected­ly soared 2.3 million barrels last week as refineries sharply slowed production, while gasoline builds were much larger than expected amid weak demand, the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion said on Thursday.

Hedge funds rushed to place bullish wagers on US crude oil in the week to Jan. 17, boosting their net long positions to the highest levels since July 2014, data from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed.

Gross long positions in NYMEX futures and options among speculator­s soared to the highest on record, based on publicly available data going back to 2006.

Libya’s National Oil Corporatio­n, meanwhile, said production had now climbed to 722,000 bpd, resuming its rise after poor weather had caused a small dip.

Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commoditie­s analyst at SEB Markets, said Brent crude was starting to move into a trading range around $ 55 as the production cut deal placed a floor price of $50, while US shale oil producers capped the upside at $60. —

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