OPEC to raise output to make up for unforeseen disruptions; Canadian outage helps support U.S. crude.
Brent crude oil fell by more than 1 percent on Monday as investors prepared for an extra 1 million barrels per day (bpd) in output to hit the markets after OPEC and its partners agreed to raise production.
Despite the increase, which is intended to stop the gap between global supply and demand from becoming too wide, analysts said global
oil markets would likely remain relatively tight this year.
Brent crude futures fell $1.16 to $74.39 a barrel by 1126 GMT, while U.S. light crude was up 16 cents at $68.74 a barrel, supported in part by a Canadian supply outage.
Prices initially jumped after an OPEC deal to increase output was announced late last week, as it was not seen boosting supply by as much as some had expected.
OPEC and non-OPEC partners including Russia have since 2017 cut output by 1.8 million bpd to tighten the market and prop up prices.
"OPEC are really going all-out to prevent oil prices from biting in the second half of the year," SEB head of commodities Bjarne Schieldrop said.
"It was a very strong message - we are going to meet demand and we're not going to disappoint consumers."
After officially meeting on Friday, OPEC gave a press conference on Saturday that implied a bigger increase in supply.
"Saturday's OPEC+ press conference provided more clarity on the decision to increase production, with guidance for a full 1 million bpd ramp-up in 2H18," Goldman Sachs said in a note on Sunday.
"This is a larger increase than presented Friday although the goal remains to stabilize inventories, not generate a surplus," the U.S. bank added.
Largely because of unplanned disruptions in places such as Venezuela and Angola, the group's output has been below the targeted cuts, which it now says will be reversed by supply increases, especially from OPEC leader Saudi Arabia. Analysts warn however there is little spare capacity for large-scale output increases.
"As yet there is no plan as to how the limits will be reallocated. One simple approach would be to reduce the limits of those not producing enough by 600,000 bpd and increase the limits of members with spare capacity by 600,000 bpd – this would enable 100 percent compliance," said Callum MacPherson,
Investec (ITCFY) head of commodities.
Goldman Sachs also warned that an "outage at Syncrude Canada's oil sands facility could leave
North America short of 360,000 bpd of supply for all of July".
It added that this "will exacerbate the current global deficit, making the increase in OPEC production all the more required".
By Amanda Cooper