Business Standard

Oil prices rise as Saudi Arabia discusses supply cuts

- CHRISTOPHE­R JOHNSON London, 5 January REUTERS

Oil prices rose on Thursday after Saudi Arabia started talks with customers about a reduction in crude sales to support a plan by Opec to lower global supply.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries promised in November to cut output to help prop up prices.

Under the deal, Saudi Arabia agreed to cut output by 486,000 barrels per day (bpd), or 4.61 per cent of its October output of 10.544 million bpd.

"Aramco is approachin­g all its customers for possible cuts from February and discussing likely (supply) scenarios," one source told Reuters, referring to state oil giant Saudi Aramco.

"Nothing is confirmed yet," the source said, adding the scenarios were for cuts of 3-7 per cent.

Investors have been suspicious that Opec may not cut as much as promised, but several sources told Reuters on Thursday the world's biggest oil exporter intended to lower exports to comply with the Opec reductions.

Benchmark Brent crude oil was up 35 cents a barrel at $56.81 by 1340 GMT. US light crude was up 35 cents a barrel at $53.61. Both contracts rose by around 2 per cent on Wednesday.

"There remains a question mark over whether Opec, with a long history of non-compliance, will actually follow through (with the cuts). Very few respondent­s expect full compliance," Singapore Exchange (SGX) said, citing results from a survey of its participan­ts.

"Three-quarters of those surveyed went for (crude) prices averaging within the current $50-$60 a barrel range (for 2017)," SGX added.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs said even if Opec reduced production as promised, there was "only moderate oil spot price upside given the expected supply response to higher oil prices and new production".

The US bank said it expected Brent prices to peak at $59 a barrel by mid-2017.

In another sign of compliance with the cuts, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) has scheduled maintenanc­e at oilfields for March and April, although it was not immediatel­y clear how much exports might fall.

Oil prices also found support from an American Petroleum Institute report showing US crude inventorie­s fell 7.4 million barrels last week.

US government figures on inventorie­s were due to be published at 11 am EST (1600 GMT) on Thursday.

A Reuters survey forecast the government report would show US crude stocks declined by about 2.2 million barrels in the week to December 30.

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