Cape Times

Brent surges above $60 a barrel

Opec supply cut may stay

- Jessica Summers

BRENT surged above $60 (R846) a barrel for the first time in more than two years amid enthusiasm that Opec may extend its supply-restraint deal and indication­s that the situation between Iraq and the Kurds remains fragile.

The global benchmark jumped to levels last seen in July 2015 and crude in New York closed near an eightmonth high.

Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman last week backed the extension of production cuts by Opec beyond March, fuelling optimism.

At the same time, crude flows from Iraq to Ceyhan, Turkey, remain below normal levels and a US spokespers­on said the Kurds and Iraqis haven’t reached an official cease-fire.

Extension “The Saudis keep pressing for an extension of the output-cut deal through next year, so the market is feeding off that, and we are seeing signs of tightening,” John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital, a New York-based hedge fund, said. “The Iraq-Kurd situation is also getting the attention of the market. The volumes are down out of Ceyhan. This is not resolving itself as quickly as it looked like it might have been.”

Brent for December settlement jumped $1.14 to end the session at $60.44 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange.

Prices were up 4.7 percent last week.

The global benchmark traded at a premium of $6.54 to West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI).

WTI for December delivery added $1.26 to settle at $53.90 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Total volume traded was near the 100-day average.

“This seems to be a carry-forward of this bullish momentum we’ve been seeing. The overall consensus towards crude is a little more positive,” Ashley Petersen, lead oil analyst at Stratas Advisors in New York, said.

Both the global benchmark and its US counterpar­t have rallied in October amid increasing belief that Opec will agree to cut output later into next year, helping to work down global inventorie­s.

Statoil’s chief executive Eldar Saetre said that he continues to see strong demand and the oil market is “definitely balancing”.

“People are starting to price in the OECD inventorie­s moving back towards normalised levels into later 2018,” Brad Hunnewell, a senior equity analyst at Rockefelle­r & Company, said.

WTI rallied immediatel­y after US Army Colonel Ryan Dillon, a spokespers­on for Operation Inherent Resolve, the US-led coalition against the Islamic State, said on Friday that he “incorrectl­y” said in an interview with Kurdish Rudaw news agency that there was a cease-fire between Iraqi and Kurdish forces.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi suspended operations by federal forces for 24 hours in disputed areas to allow a joint Iraqi and Kurdish team to deploy forces, Sumaria TV reported.

Both the global benchmark and its US counterpar­t have rallied in October.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Energy Index was up by the most in almost two weeks, with Cabot Oil & Gas Corporatio­n, EQT Corporatio­n and Chesapeake Energy Corporatio­n leading the pack.

As earnings season kicked off, Exxon Mobil Corporatio­n and Chevron Corporatio­n reported lower production compared with third-quarter estimates. Total posted the highest earnings from pumping oil and gas in more than two years, and its chief executive Patrick Pouyanne said the imbalance between crude supply and demand is finally dissipatin­g.

“You’ve had a couple of the major internatio­nal oil companies reporting production results that have been perhaps modestly below street expectatio­ns,” Hunnewell said. “That’s also lending support to oil’s rally,” he said. – Bloomberg

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