Martes, 11 Julio 2017

Oil moves higher on demand outlook

Prices inch upwards but concerns still remain for an over supplied market.
UPSTREAMONLINE.COM

REUTERS

Oil prices edged up early on Tuesday, lifted in part by a strong demand outlook for the coming weeks, but overall market conditions remain weak on the back of ample supplies and a more subdued outlook for long-term demand.
 
Brent crude futures were at $47.13 per barrel early on Tuesday, up 25 cents, or 0.5%, from their last close.
 
US West Texas Intermediate crude futures were at $44.64 per barrel, up 24 cents, or 0.5%.
 
Traders said the uptick in prices was in part due to healthy demand expected in the coming weeks.
 
Weekly US gasoline demand data "compares favourably to the five-year average and miles driven also continue to grow year-on-year," Bank of America Merrill Lynch said.
 
However, beyond the seasonal strength, "US gasoline demand may have peaked in absolute terms last year", it said, adding that there was no structural tightness in sight once the peak demand summer season finishes.
 
Crude prices are still about 17% below their 2017 opening levels despite a deal led by Opec to cut production from January.
 
"Traders are worried that increasing supply from Nigeria and Libya, both of which are recovering from internal conflict, will continue and further undermine the output caps agreed to by Opec and Russia," said William O'Loughlin, investment analyst at Australia's Rivkin Securities.
 
Opec along with some other producers like Russia, but excluding the US, agreed to hold back around 1.8 million barrels per day of production between January this year and March 2018.
 
However, an over 10% jump since mid-2016 in US production to 9.34 million bpd, as well as rising output from Nigeria and Libya, Opec-members who were exempt from cutting, have undermined efforts to tighten the market.
 
Opec exported 25.92 million bpd in June, 450,000 bpd more than in May and 1.9 million bpd more than a year earlier.
 
"The simple truth is that Opec and Russia have to contend with the fact that there is output growth elsewhere diluting their efforts at reducing supply," French bank BNP Paribas said.
 
"We thus have made deep cuts to our crude oil price forecasts. We now see the price of WTI averaging $49 per barrel 2017 (-$8/barrel revision) and that of Brent $51 per barrel (-$9/barrel revision). We also revise downwards 2018 with WTI averaging $45 per barrel (-$16 per barrel) and Brent $48 per barrel (-$15/barrel revision)," BNP said.