Oil Poised for Worst Month in Ten Years

Oil is on track for its worst month in a decade on growing fears over a global supply glut which has been exacerbated by American waivers to Iranian crude buyers.

 

Futures in New York are set to drop about 21 percent in November, falling for a second month. While Russia showed a willingness to join Saudi Arabia in curbing output, the outcome of an OPEC meeting in Vienna  is still unclear as the group is under pressure from President Donald Trump to lower prices.

 

Meanwhile, the spectre of expanding US crude stockpiles has also been haunting the market.

 

After reaching a four-year high in early October, crude has collapsed more than 30 percent, marking the worst crash since 2015.

 

While oversupply concerns were fuelled by American exemptions on sanctioned Iranian oil, a trade dispute between the US and China has threatened to hurt demand.

 

Oil has remained in an oversold territory this month, and seesawed near the US$50 threshold last week — a key budgetary marker for shale drillers.

 

“While oil retreated on oversupply concerns and it’s still possible that it could teeter in the short term, prices will go higher in the mid- to long-term,” Lim Jaekyun, a commodities analyst at KB Securities Company, said in Seoul.

 

“There is optimism over OPEC’s supply cuts as well as slowing US output as current prices could idle shale production.”

 

West Texas Intermediate for January delivery traded at US$51.38 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 7 cents, at 8:06 am in London. The contract gained 2.3 percent to close at US$51.45 on the 29th November. Total volume traded was 18 percent above the 100-day average.

 

Brent for January settlement, which expired on the 30th November, added 7 cents to US$59.58 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange.

 

The contract is down about 21 percent this month. The global benchmark traded at an US$8.19 premium to WTI. The more-active February contract rose 6 cents.

 

Earlier last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin said crude around US$60 a barrel is “balanced and fair,” but he also added that Moscow is ready to cooperate with its fellow producers. The comment seemed less definitive than the Saudis’ call for the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies to remove about one million barrels a day from the market.

 

Russian and Saudi officials were scheduled to meet in Moscow over the weekend, signalling that an agreement on production cuts is possible if a meeting between Mr Putin and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the G-20 summit in Argentina goes well, said people briefed with the talks.

 

Russia wants more predictability and “smooth price dynamics” in world crude markets, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said in Buenos Aires.

 

In America, nationwide oil inventories gained for a tenth week by 3.58 million barrels last week, according to the Energy information Administration. That is the longest rising streak since November 2015.

 

Source: Rigzone