Gulf News

Brent extends losses as it slips below $70

PRICES DOWN OVER 20% AFTER FOUR-YEAR HIGH ON SEPTEMBER 20

- BY SIDDESH SURESH MAYENKAR Senior Reporter

It looks as if US President Donald Trump has been successful in pushing the oil market, along with the dollar, further into bear territory.

Oil prices retreated below $70 (Dh257) per barrel after a strong pullback just after it witnessed the longest losing streak since July 1984 last Friday.

Brent crude prices traded 4.12 per cent lower at $67.23 per barrel on Monday.

Prices of the global crude benchmark are still down more than 20 per cent after it touched a four-year high of $86.29 on September 20. West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) was 4.19 per cent lower at $57.42 per barrel.

“We moved from oil shortage fears early October to weare-awash-in-oil recently. This has been driven by several factors: Trump’s exemptions on Iranian oil, rising production in Russia and the US and rising US oil inventorie­s,” Giovanni Staunovo, Commodity Analyst at UBS told Gulf News.

Saudi Arabia said on Sunday it will slash production by 500,00 barrels, or about 0.5 per cent of current global supply to which Trump responded that Saudi Arabia and Opec, which have an output cut agreement in place since January 2017, will not be cutting oil production again.

360 degrees turn

The possibilit­y of an output cut is a 360 degree turn from deliberati­ons to raise output to fill the void left by sanctionsh­it Iran, which produces 3.8 million barrels of oil per day, making it the third-largest producer.

Analysts are yet to see a floor to the price and it would depend on many factors.

“We expect that output cuts from Opec and the ongoing downward revisions on US oil output for 2019 will put a floor to prices. In fact we think that prices are about to bottom up and will close the year above $70,” Francisco Quintana, Economist Head of Strategy at Foresight Advisors said.

Staunovo from UBS expects oil prices to recover.

“I still believe Iranian oil exports will fall by 1-1.5 million barrels per day into yearend from the April levels and as oil demand growth remains solid, I expect oil prices to recover over the coming weeks towards $85 (per barrel) for Brent,” Staunovo said.

“To see a turnaround in prices, US crude inventorie­s need probably to peak. With US refineries increasing their runs as they exit the maintenanc­e season that should happen in the next few weeks,” he added.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Oil rally faces tidal wave of supply
Oil rally faces tidal wave of supply

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates