Oil rises toward US$63 as OPEC cuts weighed against US supplies


Brent crude futures were at $67.29 per barrel at 0135 GMT, up 43 cents, or 0.6 percent, from the previous close. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were at $63.89 a barrel. That was up 50 cents, or 0.8 percent, from their last settlement.

TOKYO: Oil climbed to a two-week high as investors weighed record compliance to output curbs by OPEC and its allies against expanding U.S. supplies and a broader selloff in risk assets.

Futures in New York rose as much as 1.1% after dropping for the first time in four sessions on Monday. While U.S. crude inventories are forecast to have grown by 3.4 million barrels last week, that prediction calls for a slower pace of expansion than the week prior. 

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners, which are trying to ease a global glut via output cuts, are said to have complied with pledged curbs at a rate of 138 percent in February.

Oil has swung around this month after registering its worst February decline in half a decade as a global equity market rout spread to commodities. U.S. crude production that has boomed to a record as well as rising American inventories are prompting speculation that OPEC and its allies will have to extend output cuts into 2019 to reach the group’s goal of reducing inventories to their five-year average.

“U.S. shale production is putting a big cap on oil prices,” Satoru Yoshida, a commodity analyst at Rakuten Securities Inc., said by phone from Tokyo. Still, “the oil market is quite firm. Even if prices fall for various reasons, they rebound fairly quickly and there’s buying support there.”

West Texas Intermediate for April delivery, which expires on Tuesday, climbed as much as 69 cents to US$62.75 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest intraday level since March 6. 

Prices traded at US$62.61 by 4:43 p.m. in Tokyo. The contract fell 28 cents to US$62.06 on Monday. The more-active May contract climbed 56 cents to US$62.69. Total volume traded was about 19% below the 100-day average.

Brent for May settlement gained 48 cents to US$66.53 on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange, after slipping 0.2% on Monday. The global benchmark crude traded at a US$3.84 premium to WTI for the same month.

Nationwide crude inventories are at their highest since December and probably added 3.4 million barrels last week, according to a Bloomberg survey before the Energy Information Administration data due Wednesday. While supplies are set for a fourth weekly advance, the forecast build is smaller than a 5-million-barrel increase the week earlier.

The Joint Technical Committee last month saw a record compliance rate from OPEC members and its allies, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The OPEC-12 compliance was 142%, while non-OPEC countries were at 13%, one person said, asking not to be named because the figures are not public.

In the meantime, stocks in Asia dropped for a third day, adding bearishness to oil markets. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell as much as 0.8%, following U.S. equities lower after a sell-off in technology shares dampened investor sentiment toward risky assets. - Bloomberg

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