Gulf News

Dollar, shale pull oil prices down

SPECULATIO­N THAT US SHALE PRODUCERS COULD INCREASE DRILLING ACTIVITY ADDS TO DOWNWARD PRICE PRESSURE

- JUNE 5 MEETING

Crude oil fell to around $65 a barrel yesterday, pressured by the possibilit­y that US shale oil producers could increase drilling activity and by a stronger greenback

Oil fell to around $65 (Dh238.7) a barrel yesterday, pressured by the possibilit­y that US shale oil producers could increase drilling activity and by a stronger dollar.

US drillers cut the number of rigs by just one last week, data showed on Friday, and Goldman Sachs said prices were at a level that would spur activity.

The dollar could rally further, Morgan Stanley said, adding to a growing list of headwinds crude faces that include rising Opec supply.

Brent crude was down 45 cents at $65.07 a barrel at 0948 GMT, while US crude, also known as WTI, was 43 cents lower at $59.29.

“The main factor weighing on prices is the significan­tly appreciati­ng US dollar,” said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commerzban­k.

“What is more, the decline in drilling activity in the US that has been ongoing for 23 weeks appears to have stopped.”

More drilling in the United States would lessen the prospect of a tighter oil market in coming months, one of the factors that have helped Brent rise from a near six-year low close to $45 in January.

“We believe that should West Texas Intermedia­te prices remain near $60 a barrel, US producers will ramp up activity, given improved returns,” Goldman said in a report.

A stronger dollar makes dollar-priced commoditie­s more expensive for buyers using other currencies, and tends to weigh on oil prices. The dollar hit a onemonth high against a basket of major currencies yesterday.

“The USD downward correction is complete,” Morgan Stanley said in a report. “A stronger dollar would only reinforce our near-term concerns for oil prices, especially Brent.”

Brent collapsed from $115 in June 2014 due to ample supplies in a decline that deepened after Opec last November dropped its policy of cutting output to support prices, in a bid to slow higher-cost competing supply sources such as US shale.

Taking turns in dominating sentiment since then are concerns about ample supplies currently and the prospect of a tighter market ahead as supply growth from higher-cost producers slows. The Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries gathers on June 5. On Sunday, Iran said Opec was unlikely to change its production ceiling at the meeting.

BULLION TRADING

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