San Antonio Express-News

Surprise Saudi cut gives oil best week in months

- By Andres Guerra Luz

Oil posted the biggest weekly gain since late September as Saudi Arabia’s plan to slice output spurred a surge in physical crude buying.

Futures in New York advanced $3.72 this week and Brent oil topped $55 a barrel for the first time since February. Saudi Arabia’s pledge earlier this week to cut production by1million barrels a day in February and March has made for a tighter supply outlook sooner than anticipate­d. Meanwhile, prospects for additional stimulus under a Biden administra­tion spurred broader market gains.

Saudi Arabia’s surprise cut appears to have caught some Asian buyers by surprise and demand for U.S. crude for export to Asia has gained this week. Unipec, the trading arm of China’s largest refiner, bought its eighth cargo of North Sea crude in a pricing window run by S&P Global Platts this week and was seeking more in what may be the heaviest buying of its kind on record.

“The decision by the Saudis was a big deal and it’s an underpinni­ng for prices,” said Bill O’grady, executive vice president at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis. “Clearly, maintainin­g the oil price was paramount and they were willing to let others take advantage in order to accomplish that.”

Brent’s move above $55 a barrel caps a stellar few months for the oil market, with crude emerging as a favored play to bet on coronaviru­s vaccines and global reflation. Saudi Arabia’s pledge has led analysts to rethink their projection­s for crude’s price recovery. Citigroup Inc. boosted its price forecasts on Friday, saying the kingdom’s actions should accelerate stockpile draws.

Meanwhile, annual commodity index rebalancin­g may provide another tailwind, with as much as $9 billion of oil contracts possibly being bought over the five days of activity that start Friday, Citigroup said.

“It is likely that much of the commodity index buying has been prepositio­ned for,” so it would not come as a surprise “to see counter-intuitive price action occur next week,” Ryan Fitzmauric­e, commoditie­s strategist at Rabobank, said in a note. “But we still expect commodity markets to attract more attention this year even beyond the rebalance as a weak U.S. dollar and increased fears of inflation bring the alternativ­e asset class back in vogue.”

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