Business World

Oil near flat in strong week; OPEC meeting awaited

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NEW YORK — Oil prices were little changed in modest volume on Thursday, during a week in which crude benchmarks recouped more of March’s losses on increased hopes world supply and demand were nearing balance.

At the same time, the US oil rig count rose to its highest level in two years, threatenin­g the rebalancin­g of markets.

Energy services firm Baker Hughes said on Thursday that drillers added 11 oil rigs in the week to April 13, bringing the total count up to 683. The number of US rigs has increased for 13 consecutiv­e weeks.

The market has been oversuppli­ed since mid-2014, prompting members of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries ( OPEC) and some nonOPEC producers to agree to cut output this semester.

With the increasing rig count pointing to rising supply, said Tony Headrick, energy market analyst at CHS Hedging, OPEC would be watching.

“Ultimately OPEC is viewing it as a point of discussion in terms of whether or not they look to extend cuts,” Headrick said.

OPEC meets on May 25 to consider extending the cuts beyond June. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and most other OPEC members are leaning towards this if agreement is reached with other producers, OPEC sources told Reuters last month.

OPEC data showed members of the group had cut March output beyond the level they had promised.

Benchmark Brent crude futures settled up three cents to $55.89 a barrel after touching a one-month high on Wednesday. US West Texas Intermedia­te crude futures settled up seven cents at $ 53.18 a barrel. Both benchmarks were set for a third consecutiv­e weekly gain. About 431,000 US crude contracts changed hands Thursday, short of the 531,000-contract average over the past 200 trading days.

The Paris- based Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) said on Thursday that supply and demand in the global oil market were close to matching after a fall in stockpiles in developed countries in March.

The IEA said oil stocks in the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t industrial­ized countries fell by 17.2 million barrels in March, although inventorie­s were still 300 million barrels above the fiveyear average.

The IEA trimmed its oil demand growth forecast for 2017 by 40,000 barrels per day and warned that its revised level of 1.3 million barrels per day “could prove optimistic.” —

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