Gulf News

Opec may extend oil curbs at Vienna meet

Organisati­on to prolong cuts for at least 6 months, 24 out of 25 analysts believe

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Opec will extend an accord that trims production, even as surging US output threatens the group’s goal of draining excess supply, according to a Bloomberg survey.

The Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies will prolong the curbs for at least six months when ministers meet on May 25 in Vienna, according to 24 of 25 analysts polled last week. The respondent­s were split on whether the extension will last for six or nine months, and were also at odds over the probabilit­y of the cuts rebalancin­g the market.

“They don’t have much of a choice other than to extend the cuts,” Kim Brady, senior managing director at SOLIC Capital in Evanston, Illinois, said by telephone. “They have said they will do whatever needs to be done to balance the market. They haven’t achieved it yet.”

Russia and Saudi Arabia, the largest of the 24 oil exporters that agreed to cut output for the first six months of the year, said on Monday that they favour a nine-month extension of the curbs. Prolonged curbs are needed to reduce global stockpiles to the five-year average, the energy ministers of the world’s biggest crude producers said. Opec’s Kuwait and Venezuela, and non-members Oman and South Sudan support the proposal.

Global benchmark Brent crude was trading up 0.6 per cent at $52.84 (Dh194) a barrel as of noon in Singapore and heading for a 4 per cent gain this week.

The world’s oil stockpiles increased slightly in the first quarter, but are set to decline in the second as demand picks up seasonally and Opec constrains output, the IEA said Tuesday. Still, even if there’s an accord prolonging the measures, inventorie­s will probably remain above average at the end of the year, the agency said.

“The producers will have to work hard this summer to temper the surplus in the first quarter,” Sarah Emerson, managing director of ESAI Energy in Wakefield, Massachuse­tts, said by telephone. “Extending the Opec-Russia deal through March raises an interestin­g flag. It shows they are worried about the first quarter, as they should be.”

Opec members agreed in November to cut 1.2 million barrels a day of oil production. Several non-members, including Russia, agreed in December to contribute a combined 600,000 barrels a day of output reductions. Opec’s rate of compliance with its promised cutbacks has averaged 96 per cent this year, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

Prices to rise

Banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc. say that even with the resurgence of US oil production, markets are tightening and prices are poised to rise. The decline in global fuel stockpiles will accelerate this quarter, Jeffrey Currie, head of commoditie­s research at Goldman said at the S&P Global Platts Global Crude Summit in London.

Earlier this month, Opec boosted estimates for growth in rival supplies this year by 64 per cent to 950,000 barrels a day as US output rebounds. The nation will probably pump a record 9.96 million barrels a day in 2018, the EIA said May 9. While US crude inventorie­s are finally showing signs of shrinking, there are doubts Opec can succeed in the face of a shale revival.

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