Oil prices steady ahead of OPEC meeting
Oil prices steady ahead of OPEC meeting
Agence France-Presse
Singapore
Oil prices were steady in Asian trading on Monday, underpinned by
expectations that OPEC will cut output when it meets this week,
dealers said.
The benchmark New York light sweet crude contract for May
delivery briefly dipped to US$30.06 a barrel in after hours trade
but at around 11:50 am (0350 GMT) was back at its New York close
of $30.55 on Thursday when trading ceased for the Easter weekend.
The lower price in early trade was "not an accurate reflection
of price trends," said a dealer with a European firm.
"Some people were probably short-covering ahead of the (May)
contract's closure. The June contract is a better representation
of the trend," he said. Trading shifts to the June contract on
Tuesday.
The dealer said the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) will most likely cut output when it meets
Thursday.
But he said prices should hover around current levels unless
OPEC cuts production by more than one million barrels a day.
OPEC ministers are expected to seek a production cut when they
meet in Vienna, but deciding how output should be reduced and by
whom could prove more difficult, analysts say.
With OPEC already overshooting its production quota by seven
percent, according to March trading figures, there could be
heated debate over whether members' individual ceilings need to
be reduced or simply observed.
Among the factors clouding the cartel's deliberations will be
the continuing uncertainty over when Iraqi oil exports are most
likely to resume.