Oil Rises Above $75 With OPEC+ Gathering to Discuss Output Hikes
(Bloomberg) — Oil rose above $75 a barrel in New York as the market awaited a decision from OPEC+ on production levels for the coming months.
Crude futures added as much as 2.7% to trade at the highest since 2018. OPEC+’s de facto leaders, Saudi Arabia and Russia, have a tentative agreement to increase output gradually, but are still negotiating a deal, delegates said as ministers gathered online on Thursday. The proposal under discussion would add about 2 million barrels a day to the cartel’s output between August and December, they said.
See also: OPEC+ Heads Into Talks That Could Prove Crucial for Oil Prices
As oil prices rose, another energy market saw even stronger gains. European natural gas prices hit an all-time high on Thursday. The two markets are at times connected, as some gas contracts have a link to the crude and fuel-oil markets.
The OPEC+ meeting is happening against a backdrop of tightening supply. Crude inventories in the U.S. are falling at the fastest rate in decades, while shale producers are remaining disciplined with their spending and won’t overwhelm OPEC, ConocoPhillips Chief Executive Officer Ryan Lance said on Wednesday. In another bullish sign, TotalEnergies SE, one of Europe’s biggest refiners, bid for benchmark Forties crude at the highest premiums in 17 months.
“We absolutely think prices are going to continue to rally, especially if OPEC adds anything up to 500,000 barrels per day,” Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst at consultant Energy Aspects, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “It’s a drop in the ocean.”
Oil surged more than 50% in the year through June, its best half since 2009, as vaccine rollouts helped to restore mobility in major energy markets such as the U.S., China and Europe. The risk of a quick return of Iranian crude also appears to be receding as negotiations with world powers over the country’s nuclear program face renewed delays. Citigroup Inc. said in a note that it expected the market to remain in “deep deficit” through this quarter even after accounting for increased output from OPEC+.
In the U.S., crude inventories fell by 6.7 million barrels last week to the lowest since March 2020, according to the Energy Information Administration. Stockpiles at the nation’s biggest storage hub at Cushing, Oklahoma, declined, while gasoline supplies rose.
“Anything less than a 500,000-barrel-a-day supply increase in August will be enough to see the bulls push the market higher,” said Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy at ING Group in Singapore. “While there are concerns over rising cases of the delta variant in some regions, the market is doing a good job at ignoring it for now.”
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