Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Oil hits August high on potential producer action to prop up market

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REUTERS: Oil prices rose yesteday to fresh highs for the month of August, with the Brent benchmark gaining 11 percent since the start of the month, as speculatio­n intensifie­s about potential producer action to support prices in an oversuppli­ed market. Brent crude oil futures rose to a high for the month of US $47.40 a barrel on Monday before dipping back to US $47.30 per barrel at 0644 GMT, up 33 cents from their last settlement, and 11.3 percent above the last close in July.

U.S. West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude futures rose to a high of $44.95 a barrel before dipping to US $44.85 a barrel, still up 36 cents from their last close. WTI has gained more than 7 percent in August.

“Oil posted another ... gain as speculatio­n of potential production freezes by OPEC picked up pace. Saudi Arabia signalled that it is prepared to discuss stabilisin­g the markets at informal OPEC discussion­s next month,” ANZ bank said.

“This was despite another strong rise in drilling activity in the U.S. ... Baker Hughes data showed the number of rigs operating in the U.S. rose by 15 last week to 396,” it added. After falling sharply from over 1,600 in 2014, before the price rout started, to a low of just 316 in late May, the U.S. oil rig count has steadily risen since then as U.S. producers have adjusted to lower prices. Morgan Stanley said that weak fundamenta­ls would eventually begin to outweigh the bullish sentiment that has recently lifted prices.

“Fundamenta­ls tend to be a stronger driver medium term, and the picture appears skewed negative over the coming months,” the U.S. bank said. It cited high production and swelling inventorie­s as well as an ongoing glut in the fuel market which is likely to spill back into the crude sector as refiners cut back production and orders for crude as a feedstock.

In a sign of an ongoing fight between Middle East producers for Asian market share, Iran’s crude exports to South Korea rose in July to nearly four times the level of a year ago, and 5.9 percent higher than the previous month.

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