Business World

Growing US supply fears keep oil under pressure

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NEW YORK — Oil prices slipped on Monday, despite news that the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) was supportive of extending a sixmonth deal to cut output as investors continue to grapple with worries about growing US oil output and high inventorie­s.

Brent crude futures settled at $51.62 a barrel, down 14 cents. US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude futures settled down 56 cents, or 1.20%, to $48.22 a barrel.

Prices briefly surged into positive territory after sources within the group said OPEC was considerin­g extending production cuts into the second half of 2017.

The spike repeated a pattern that has emerged in the last 10 days after a market rout that saw big speculator­s exit bullish positions after weeks of persistent­ly high inventory figures. Crude has made a few attempts to rebound after a 10% decline a week-and-a-half ago, but the surges have generally been brief.

Analysts say speculativ­e investors are likely to keep reducing bullish positions, thanks to optimism among US producers boosting drilling activity, which in part will offset OPEC’s bid to reduce supply. “I think oil is reacting still to the steady rise in the US rig count and the realizatio­n that momentum is building to the downside from the reposition­ing of speculativ­e interests in the market,” said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital in New York.

Analysts expect US production to continue to increase. James West, energy analyst at Evercore ISI, wrote in a note that meetings with oil companies last week showed “sentiment has dramatical­ly improved and the focus has rapidly transition­ed to accommodat­ing the renewed demand.”

Last week speculator­s cut more than 150,000 contracts betting on firmer US and Brent oil prices, a record high.

Latest US drilling data supported estimates for higher production, with 14 oil rigs added in the week to March 17 to 631, the most since September 2015, energy services company Baker Hughes, Inc. said on Friday. Growing US output is playing into concerns about the effectiven­ess of the deal between OPEC members and other producers.

Official data showed that Saudi Arabia’s crude exports fell by about 300,000 barrels per day in January, but last week’s OPEC report showing production rebounded in February means this figure was of less comfort, traders said.

Higher non- OPEC supply prospects led J.P. Morgan analysts, in a report, to cut 2017 and 2018 price forecasts to $55.75 and $55.50 for Brent and to $53.75 and $53.50 for WTI, respective­ly. “The risks that OPEC has painted itself into a corner cannot be ignored and it may need to extend, or even increase, cuts if the response from shale producers is more vigorous than we currently model.” —

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