*Top oil officials from Saudi Arabia, Russia and several key Opec members to discuss supply glut
*Oil
refinery in Japan. US crude prices may come under further pressure as
oil inventories remain close to record levels. Photograph: Toru
Hanai/Reuters
Oil prices surged temporarily on Tuesday,
reaching their highest levels in more than a week after Russia and Saudi
Arabia provided the markets with hope of an eventual deal to tackle a
deep supply glut.
Representatives from two of the world’s biggest oil
producers agreed to freeze production levels, in what could be the
first deal between an Opec and non-Opec country in 15 years.
However a
major sticking point in sealing a comprehensive deal may be Iran, which
was absent from the talks and has been determined to raise production.
Brent
crude for April delivery was up $2 at $35.39 (£24.76) a barrel, on top
of 11% gains over the past two days. But it later retreated to $32.37,
lower than it started the day’s trading, as traders and analysts grew
sceptical about what was achievable.
More on this topic
Why the falling oil price may not lead to boom
US
crude rose by as much as $1.50, or 5.1%, to $30.94. It was the highest
level since 8 February and came on top of Friday’s gains of more than
12%. The price later slipped back to $28.99.
The talks in Doha, which
had been kept under wraps until recent days, involved powerful Saudi
oil minister Ali al-Naimi and his Russian counterpart Alexander Novak,
sources said, two figures who must reach an accord for any coordinated
global action to hold any hope of success.
They were joined by
Venezuela’s oil minister, Eulogio Del Pino, who has in recent weeks been
visiting major oil producers to rally support for the idea of freezing
production at current levels in an effort to halt a downward spiral in
prices, sources have said.
“A production freeze dependent upon the
involvement of Iran seems a bridge too far at this juncture,” said Matt
Smith, director of commodity research at New York-based ClipperData, an
energy data provider.
While the decision was a move towards bringing
supply and demand into balance, analysts also cautioned that global
inventories remain near record levels and are likely to dampen any price
rallies.
“I’m adding to the short positions I have in US crude
spreads as I only expect price declines from here,” said Tariq Zahir at
New York’s Tyche Capital Advisors. “The output freeze will do nothing to
alleviate excess supply.”
More on this topic
Talks about cutting oil output show Russians and Saudis feel the pain
Daniel
Ang, an analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore, said: “As much as we
continue to believe that this is yet another meeting that would yield
nothing, the markets remain wary of any sudden agreement that major oil
producers could come to.”
Oil prices have fallen by more than 70% in
the past 20 months, driven lower by near-record production both from
Opec and other producers, such as Russia.
But analysts also cautioned
of violent price spikes and market volatility in coming weeks should
there be indications of serious production or stockpile declines.
US
crude prices may come under pressure as oil inventories remain close to
record levels and US refiners are cutting back their processing runs on
falling profit margins.
WTI (West Texas Intermediate) may fall to
below $20 a barrel as a drop in US crude demand outweighs cutbacks in
production as domestic producers shut wells, BMI Research said in a
note.
www.theguardian.com/business/2016/feb/16/oil-prices-rise-on-talk-of-output-cut-saudi-arabia-russia-opec
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