Oil at six-week high near $30
Oil at six-week high near $30
Reuters, London
U.S. oil prices climbed to a six-week high near US$30 a barrel on
Monday as traders reacted to a stubborn deficit in U.S.
stockpiles and a potential output cut from OPEC.
By London midday, U.S. crude futures were up 30 cents at
$29.86 a barrel -- their highest level since April 22. Benchmark
Brent crude gained 28 cents to $26.60 a barrel, just 50 cents
away from a two-month peak.
Oil prices have rallied more than four percent since the
middle of last week, when U.S. government data showed crude oil
stockpiles were stuck 12 percent below last year's levels while
gasoline tanks fell to a six percent deficit.
Coming in the week leading up to the start of the summer
driving season, when U.S. demand for motor fuel peaks, dealers
feared a potential price spike.
"With global inventory still at extremely low levels and
particular concern over low product and crude oil inventory in
the U.S., there is little obvious sign of any significant
weakness," said Barclays Capital analyst Kevin Norrish in a daily
report.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration said implied
gasoline demand in the week to May 23 climbed to 9.3 million
barrels per day (bpd), 600,000 bpd higher than a year ago.
The big stock deficit has been accompanied by signs that the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries could be
preparing to announce an output cut at a meeting next week,
despite the fact that prices remain above its $25 target.
"Paradoxically the price strength of the past couple of days
makes a production cut...less likely," Norrish said. "If OPEC
does cut production it will be reacting to perceived weakness in
market fundamentals later on this year."
Venezuelan Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said last week that the
cartel might cut its ceiling by up to one million bpd at the June
11 meeting, but any decision hinges on the extent and speed of
recovery of Iraq's battered oil industry.
Iraqi officials are targeting output of some 1.5 million bpd
by mid-June, about half its pre-war level.
Baghdad is expected to sell later this week some eight million
barrels of crude oil stored in tanks on the Turkish Mediterranean
coast, but the timing of sustained supplies as yet remains
unclear.
The head of the International Energy Agency, Claude Mandil,
said last week that a production cut was unwarranted due to
Iraq's slow recovery and thin stockpiles.