Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Oil Prices Rebound, but Oversupply Weighs

Posted by April 20, 2017

Saudi Arabia, Kuwait signal likely cut extension; falling U.S. crude stocks offer some support.
 
Oil prices regained some ground on Thursday, after steep losses in the previous session, as leading Gulf oil producers signalled a likely extension of OPEC-led supply cuts beyond the middle of the year.
 
Brent crude futures were at $53.45 per barrel at 1117 GMT, up 52 cents from their last close.
 
U.S. crude futures were up 45 cents at $50.89 a barrel.
 
OPEC members Saudi Arabia and Kuwait signalled that an effort by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other producers, including Russia, to cut oil output was likely to be extended beyond June.
 
But bloated inventories weighed. Despite a drop in U.S. crude stocks <C-STK-T-EIA> last week, an unexpected 1.5-million-barrel build in gasoline stocks drove prices more than 3.5 percent lower on Wednesday.
 
U.S. crude oil production rose to 9.25 million barrels per day, official data showed, up almost 10 percent since mid-2016 <C-OUT-T-EIA>.
 
"The rebalancing in U.S. crude stocks may have got under way, but concerns of further gasoline builds are rife even as the U.S. summer driving season shifts up a gear," said Stephen Brennock, an analyst with PVM Oil Associates.
 
"With questions hanging over U.S. gasoline demand, any further product builds will act as a brake on the oil price recovery."
 
Global fuel stocks are well above the five-year average, and Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih was quoted on Thursday as saying inventories remained elevated in part because traders were selling supplies out of tanker storage.
 
In China, signs emerged that refiners were using record crude imports to produce more fuel such as gasoline and diesel than the country can absorb.
 

China's March gasoline output rose 2.5 percent year-on-year to 11.24 million tonnes, the highest level since at least April 2014, China's National Bureau of Statistics said, adding fuel into an Asian market that is already well supplied.

 

By Libby George

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