Houston Chronicle

Oil rally fizzles with OPEC+ set to discuss cuts

Group to weigh maintainin­g record output curbs for extra 1 to 3 months

- By Olivia Raimonde and Hailey Waller

Oil’s record rally sputtered as investors assessed whether OPEC and its allies will extend the supply curbs that helped drive prices higher.

Futures settled slightly lower in New York on Monday as the OPEC+ group that includes Russia prepares to discuss maintainin­g record output curbs for an extra one to three months. But a proposal to bring forward the meeting by several days to Thursday was still being debated two days after it was first floated.

Without an extension, the existing caps begin to wind down next month. Any changes to the existing deal will hinge on negotiatio­ns between Moscow and Riyadh. And as of last week, Russia’s position was that it wanted to start easing the cuts next month.

Meanwhile, onshore oil exploratio­n in the U.S. shrank for the 11th consecutiv­e week to a level not seen since before the shale revolution kicked off more than a decade ago. Despite well shut-ins across North America, U.S. imports of Saudi crude have surged, swelling supplies held in storage.

American stockpiles are “probably heading higher at least in the short term as more imports come in,” said Peter McNally, an analyst at Third Bridge Group Ltd.

“The market is oversuppli­ed to begin with. Everyone is looking for more signs of demand firming.”

West Texas Intermedia­te for July delivery settled down 5 cents at $35.44 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Brent, the internatio­nal benchmark, rose 48 cents to $38.32.

An earlier OPEC+ meeting would give the producer group more flexibilit­y to change its current production limits. The group’s preference is to take short-term measures on cuts as the situation is volatile, the delegate said. The coalition — which includes OPEC’s 13 members plus another 10 exporters — has achieved 92 percent compliance, according to data analytics firm Kpler. Iraq and Nigeria have been laggards in meeting their pledged targets.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Oil Fund ETF begins its monthly roll of futures contracts on Monday. The fund plans to sell its July holdings and buy more November and January futures over the next 10 trading sessions.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? West Texas Intermedia­te for July delivery settled down 5 cents at $35.44 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
New York Times file photo West Texas Intermedia­te for July delivery settled down 5 cents at $35.44 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

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