Business World

Oil steadies with slight gains but outlook more bearish

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LONDON/NEW YORK — Oil prices were largely steady on Friday, finishing the week with modest gains, but speculator­s sharply cut long positions during last week’s rout, on concerns that the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) production cut was failing to reduce a global supply overhang.

Crude traded in a narrow band last week, with Brent and West Texas Intermedia­te bouncing in a $2.50 range as investors weighed the impact of the first oil cut from OPEC in eight years against rising US shale oil output and high inventorie­s. Brent crude settled up two cents to $ 51.76 a barrel while US light crude ended up three cents to $ 48.78 a barrel. Both benchmarks gained 0.80% for the week.

However, oil has not been able to reclaim the range that prevailed through most of 2017 before the rout two weeks ago. Instead of rebounding to $53 a barrel, US crude has remained stuck around $49. Analysts anticipate that regaining the old levels may be difficult without significan­t drawdown in inventorie­s.

“I think that most are just reassessin­g the current state of direction. Everyone who was bulled up the past few months has turned,” said Carl Larry, president of Oil Outlooks and Opinions in Houston.

Futures positionin­g showed that last week’s rout pushed many speculator­s to bail out of long positions. The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission said Friday that net long positions in the crude futures market fell by more than 86,000 contracts, the biggest oneweek reduction on record. The data is current through Tuesday and captures the entirety of the other week’s selloff.

The potential for increased US production continues to build, as Baker Hughes weekly rig count data showed an increase of 14 drilling rigs in the United States.

The market failed to rebound after Saudi Arabia Minister Khalid al-Falih said on Thursday the cuts by the OPEC and non- OPEC producers could be extended beyond June if oil stockpiles stayed above long-term averages.

Saudi Arabia has cut output by more than its share under the November 2016 deal.

Six of 10 analysts polled by Reuters said they believed OPEC would prolong its output reductions past the deal’s six- month duration.

Timothy Evans, analyst at Citi Futures in New York, in a note Friday, said market sentiment may further weaken in the absence of a strong rebound to the previous range.

OPEC and non- OPEC members agreed last year to cut output by a combined 1.8 million barrels per day in the first half of 2017. But OPEC’s monthly report showed global oil stocks rose in January to 278 million barrels above the five-year average. —

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