Oil facility
in the Khark Island, on the shore of the Gulf. © AFP
|
Oil fell on Wednesday,
hit by improved prospects for U.S. output and a glut in refined products, while
analysts largely expected no impact on supplies from talk of a potential
producer meeting to discuss propping up prices.
Reuters
report continues:
International
benchmark Brent crude futures were down 63 cents at US$44.35 per barrel at 0839
GMT.
U.S.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil futures were trading at US$42.13 per
barrel, down 64 cents from their last settlement.
Traders
said excess supplies of crude and refined fuel products were weighing on
markets, while a proposed meeting by oil producers was unlikely to result in
significant market tightening.
"Oil
eased lower as another round of proposed production freeze talks by OPEC failed
to excite investors," ANZ Bank said.
Venezuela,
a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, is trying to
drum up support for a producer meeting to decide measures that would buoy oil
prices.
When
producers last held such talks in April, OPEC members failed to agree on any
measures.
"Renewed
attempts at verbal intervention by OPEC will help bolster oil market sentiment,
although the group will struggle to rebuild its role as a backstop to
Brent," oil analysts at BMI Research said in a note to clients.
OPEC
releases its monthly oil market report for July later on Wednesday.
The
U.S. Energy Information Administration added to the market's unease when on
Tuesday it forecast a smaller decline in U.S. crude oil production in 2016 than
it projected a month ago as drilling activity picks up.
The
agency now expects U.S. oil output to fall by 700,000 barrels per day (bpd)
this year to 8.73 million bpd, compared with the 820,000-bpd drop it previously
forecast.
A
global products glut that has led storage tanks from Houston to Singapore to
reach near capacity is also weighing on oil prices, as analysts warn that only
large-scale refinery run cuts can clear the excess.
In
Singapore, oil refining profits dropped to two-year lows on Wednesday, in the
latest sign that the industry is pumping too much fuel for the market to
absorb.
Meanwhile
RT News reports that Tehran has regained its pre-sanctions share of the global
oil market exporting 2.5 million barrels per day, according to Iranian Vice
President Eshaq Jahangiri.
“Iran
has managed to increase oil production that had been suspended as a result of
the sanctions and take back the country's former share of the market,”
Jahangiri said as quoted by the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC).
The
vice president stressed that some oil producers, particularly in the Persian
Gulf, have faced “enormous” problems due to plunging crude prices.
According
to Jahangiri efficient management by Iran should lead to economic stability.
In
January, economic sanctions against Iran were lifted after the UN's nuclear
watchdog confirmed the country had complied with all of the conditions required
under a deal aimed at preventing it developing nuclear weapons.
Western
sanctions limited Iran's crude exports to one million barrel per day and barred
foreign investment into the country’s oil sector.
Iran's
government says daily crude production has now reached 3.8 million barrels.
No comments:
Post a Comment