The Manila Times

Crude holds above $40 producers’ meeting

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SINGAPORE: Crude prices dipped in Asia on Tuesday but held above $ 40 as traders looked forward to a summit of key oil producers next week to discuss freezing output and easing the supply glut.

Analysts said prices were expected to see- saw ahead of Sunday’s meeting in the Qatari capital Doha that will gather both Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) producers led by Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC members such as Russia.

A major subject for the meeting is a proposal to freeze output at January levels in a bid to ease the oversupply that helped send prices plunging by three quarters to near 13- year lows between August 2014 and February this year.

At about 3 a. m. local time, US benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te for delivery in May was down 13 cents, or 0.32 percent, at $40.23 and Brent crude for June was trading 15 cents, or 0.35 percent, lower at $42.68.

Both contracts closed higher on Monday after soaring 8 percent or more last week.

Barclays Research said

the market was expected to remain “neutral” until after the April 17 summit.

“We expect better directiona­l momentum after the meeting of OPEC and non- OPEC countries,” it said in a market commentary.

However, Barclays noted that the “current expectatio­n is for their actions to have limited impact given the lack of involvemen­t in the freeze of producers that have the potential to grow output.”

Key OPEC member Iran has been raising output since nuclear-linked Western sanctions were lifted in January and has signaled it was not about to join the freeze calls.

Some analysts have said a production cut, not a freeze, would have a lasting impact on boosting prices, amid weak demand in the oversatura­ted market.

“Supply outages and adjustment­s to output in response to lower oil prices are helping to tighten market balances,” Barclays said.

But “the demand side remains 2016 relative to same period last year, it said.

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