NEWS LENSOIL & GAS

Crude oil price rises to four-week high

Crude oil price rises to four-week highOil futures extended a rise on fears of potential damage to the United States oil production from Hurricane Irma, as well as renewed demand for crude from restarted refineries in the Gulf Coast, according to MarketWatch.

West Texas Intermediate the US crude oil for October rose by 47 cents, or 0.9 per cent, to $49.13 a barrel, on track for its highest settlement level since August 9, according to FactSet data. Brent crude, the global benchmark gained 67 cents, or 1.2 per cent, to $54.05a barrel, trading around its highest level in over three months.

“Oil market participants have become used to tropical storms causing no lasting damage to the energy infrastructure. This may change now, prompting the market to price in something of an uncertainty premium. Many market participants viewed the latest fall in the WTI price as excessive in any case,” analysts at Commerzbank said in a note.

The upswing in crude prices marked a swift reversal from last week, when prices had languished in the wake of Hurricane Harvey. The storm knocked out more than 20 per cent of the US refining capacity, cutting demand for crude and weighing on prices.

Refining capacity has since started to come back online, providing support for crude. That, however, is weighing on gasoline prices that rallied last week as refineries shut down and created a short-term shortage. Gasoline for October delivery  fell by 2.5 per cent to $1.657 a gallon.

At the same time, the market is preparing for potential disruptions to oil production in the Gulf of Mexico as the result of Hurricane Irma, which made landfall in the Caribbean earlier on Wednesday, and other brewing storms. If crude output is hindered by the new storms it would boost prices, the analysts said.

Oil prices have also responded positively to suggestions Tuesday by the Russian energy minister, Alexander Novak, that Russia and Saudi Arabia would be open to extending their output cut agreement.

“The strong cooperation of the leading oil producers in combating the ‘oil glut’ is making market participants hopeful that stocks may be quickly reduced, which is boosting the price rise,” the Commerzbank analysts said.

The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries—of which Saudi Arabia is the largest member—and 10 producers outside the cartel, including Russia, first agreed late last year to cap production at around 1.8 million barrels a day lower than peak Ocober. 16 levels, with the aim of reining in the global oil glut and sending prices higher.

The deal, which was extended in May until March 2018, has been undermined by falling compliance, growing US output and an unexpected surge in production from Libya and Nigeria—two member states exempted from the agreement because their oil industries had been damaged by civil unrest.

Analysts said they were looking ahead to official US data this week on crude inventory levels, which have fallen consistently in recent months, while cautioning that the information was likely to be less reliable than usual as a result of Harvey.

In other energy products, October natural gas  rose by 1.4 per centto $3.014 per million British thermal units. Heating oil futures rose by 0.4 per cent, to $1.7548 a gallon.

 

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Copyright MMS Plus. All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from Kings Communications Limited.

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