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OIL STEADY AFTER OPEC+ SAYS OUTPUT REVIEW ON THE CARDS

▶ Brent and WTI prices rose by more than $2 a barrel during early trading hours on Friday before softening

- FAREED RAHMAN

Oil prices rose after Opec+ said it could review its policy to increase output at short notice if demand is affected by a rising number of Covid-19 infections, spurred by the Omicron strain.

Brent and West Texas Intermedia­te futures jumped as high as $72.48 a barrel and $69.13 a barrel, respective­ly, during early morning trade on Friday. The benchmarks later softened their gains.

Brent, the internatio­nal benchmark, was up 0.30 per cent at $69.88 a barrel when markets closed on Friday while WTI fell 0.36 per cent to settle at $66.26 a barrel.

Opec+, the group led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, decided on Thursday to increase output by 400,000 barrels per day for the month of January, despite demand concerns stemming from the spread of the Omicron variant.

However, it agreed to continue monitoring the market closely and to make immediate adjustment­s to its output policy if required.

Oil markets are “buoyed by the caveat in the Opec+ statement that allows them to make immediate adjustment­s before the next meeting, should they see fit once more informatio­n on Omicron is available”, said Craig Erlam, a senior market analyst for the UK and Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Oanda.

“The group has previously stated that winter surges were baked into their forecasts but Omicron threatens to be much more than that if it evades vaccines. The flexibilit­y was probably necessary to keep all parties on board with raising output as planned in January.”

Omicron, which has been designated a “variant of concern” by the World Health Organisati­on, has now been detected in 38 countries around the world.

Infections continue to jump on a daily basis, forcing countries to reimpose travel restrictio­ns to contain the spread of the pandemic.

India, one of the top consumers of oil, has postponed the resumption of internatio­nal flights from December 15.

The EU, the US, the UK and Canada have all imposed travel restrictio­ns on visitors from countries in southern Africa.

The UAE also suspended the entry of travellers from seven southern African states due to concerns over the new variant.

“There are two key reasons behind the decision to increase production. First, it eases tensions with the US administra­tion that have been building up in recent months that led to the co-ordinated SPR [strategic petroleum reserve] release,” Ehsan Khoman, head of emerging markets research at MUFG Bank, said.

“Second, lower oil prices will disincenti­vise US shale producers [from raising] their capital expenditur­e plans as they recalibrat­e their portfolios for 2022.”

Mr Khoman said Opec+ had in the past delivered a bullish strategy up to the end of the year, “which had offered the space for US shale players to be more assertive in their spending levels for the following year”.

US President Joe Biden last week announced that he ordered 50 million barrels of oil to be released from the country’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve to help to bring down energy costs, in co-ordination with other major energy-consuming nations, including China, India and the UK.

The Strategic Petroleum Reserve is an emergency stockpile to preserve access to oil in case of natural disasters, national security issues and other events.

MUFG Bank expects the oil market to return to a structural deficit by 2023 as countries focus on energy transition and cut investment in the sector.

“With upstream Capex continuing to run at low levels, our initial read on 2023 balances signals that the market will return to a deficit in that year,” Mr Khoman said.

Last week, global investment bank JP Morgan said the underinves­tment in the sector over the past 18 months, which has been caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, hit the output capacity of many producer countries and their ability to respond to recovering oil demand.

It projected that Brent will “overshoot” $125 a barrel next year and $150 in 2023 due to a lack of adequate investment in the sector.

The latest Opec+ decision provides “relief for importers” and balances the fiscal budgets of the largest oil exporters, including Saudi Arabia and Russia, said Hasnain Malik, head of equities research at Tellimer Research.

“The credible threat of a quick change in output policy may place a floor on oil prices unless data on Omicron-driven hospitalis­ation and fatalities or the effectiven­ess of existing vaccines against Omicron proves far worse than initial indication­s.”

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