Kuwait Times

Oil steady below $80

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LONDON: Brent crude oil prices steadied under $80 a barrel yesterday ahead of a key meeting of OPEC oil producers to decide on oil production levels for next year. Ministers from the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries were gathering in Vienna for a meeting tomorrow to agree how to respond to a collapse in oil prices, which have fallen by almost a third since June.

Several OPEC members want the group to cut production dramatical­ly to ease a global supply glut, but Saudi Arabia, the biggest exporter, appears reluctant to endorse a big cut. “Everybody is looking to the showdown in Vienna,” said Eugen Weinberg, head of analysis at Commerzban­k in Frankfurt. “You’ve got all kinds of expectatio­ns impacting on the market - from nothing at all towards our expectatio­n of a production cut by almost 1 million barrels per day (bpd).” Brent was trading at $79.70 a barrel by 0955 GMT, up 2 cents, while US crude was 10 cents higher at $75.88. Libya, Venezuela, Iran and Ecuador have all called for OPEC to cut production, while Kuwait has said an output reduction is unlikely.

Key will be what OPEC’s biggest producer, Saudi Arabia, decides, with some analysts expecting no price supporting action from the kingdom. “The rapid growth now being achieved in nonOPEC production means it faces the risk that even a large cut to supply may not be enough to support prices and could simply result in lost market share and revenue,” Barclays Bank analysts said. “Saudi Arabia’s response so far to falling oil prices is an acknowledg­ment that it is less able to influence oil prices than at any time over the past decade,” they added in a note.

Economic data were mixed for oil. Europe’s biggest economy, Germany, posted modest growth in the third quarter to avoid recession, data showed yesterday. Preliminar­y US data, to be published at 1330 GMT, is likely to show that the country’s GDP increased at a 3.3 percent annual pace. But a gradual slowdown in China, the world’s biggest energy consumer, weighed on oil. Credit ratings agency Moody’s said yesterday a steep economic slowdown in China could hurt sovereign borrowers with a heavy reliance on oil exports to China, such as Oman, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. —Reuters

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