Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Oil steady ahead of OPEC+ supply policy meeting

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REUTERS: Oil was steady yesterday ahead of a meeting by OPEC and its allies, which may determine whether a recent rally in prices amid supply shocks and a recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic will be sustained.

Three sources told Reuters the producer club was likely to stick to their existing agreement to add 400,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil to the market in November.

Brent crude was down 6 cents or

0.1 percent at US $ 79.22 per barrel by 0935 GMT. It rose 1.5 percent last week, its fourth weekly gain in a row. U.S. oil dropped by 13 cents or 0.2 percent to US $ 75.75, after gaining for the past six weeks. Oil prices have risen due to the supply disruption­s and a rise in global demand, pushing Brent last week above US $ 80 to a near three-year high.

“Our base case expectatio­ns for today’s OPEC meeting is that OPEC continues with its existing agreement to unwind its production cuts by around 400,000 bpd each month,” Morgan Stanley said in a note.“however, if there is a reason to do so faster, it is because OPEC’S own oil consumptio­n is also recovering at a rapid pace.” OPEC+, which groups the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies including Russia, is facing pressure from some countries to produce more to help lower prices as demand has recovered faster than expected in certain parts of the world. OPEC+ agreed in July to boost output by 400,000 barrels per day (bpd) every month until at least April 2022 to phase out 5.8 million bpd of existing cuts. Four OPEC+ sources told Reuters recently that producers were considerin­g adding more than that deal envisaged. The earliest any increase would take place would be November since the previous OPEC+ meeting decided October volumes. The oil price rally has also been fuelled by an even bigger increase in gas prices that have spiked 300 percent and are trading around US $ 200 per barrel in comparable terms, prompting switching to fuel oil and other crude products to generate electricit­y and for other industrial needs. “The uneven nature of the post-pandemic recovery will keep demand-side uncertaint­ies in play, giving rise to oil price volatility,” Fitch Solutions said in a note.

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