Oil prices climb on start of output cuts, US inventories lower than feared

Brent crude for July delivery, was up 22 cents, or 0.8% in early trading on Friday

Prices are likely to fall further this year even as countries begin to ease restrictions imposed to counter the viral outbreak and the output cuts by big producers will not fix the supply glut
Prices are likely to fall further this year even as countries begin to ease restrictions imposed to counter the viral outbreak and the output cuts by big producers will not fix the supply glut

Oil prices rose on Friday, extending the previous session’s gains, as major producers began output cuts to offset a slump in fuel demand triggered by the coronavirus pandemic while data showed US crude inventories grew less than expected.

Still, prices gave up some of their earlier gains as May began with more of the volatility that made April one of the most turbulent months in the history of oil trading, when US futures briefly crashed into negative territory.

Brent crude for July delivery, which started trading on Friday as the new front-month contract, was up 22 cents, or 0.8 per cent, at $26.70 a barrel in early trading. Brent rose 12 per cent on Thursday and rose about 11 per cent in April, but the international benchmark has sagged around 60 per cent this year on the coronavirus impact.

US crude for June delivery rose 34 cents, or 1.8 per cent, to $19.18 a barrel, having gained 25 per cent in the previous session. But US oil fell for a fourth month in April and has tumbled 70 per cent this year.

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Reflecting the output cuts agreed between OPEC and other major producers like Russia, a grouping known as OPEC+, the imbalance between oil supply and demand is to set to be halved to 13.6 million barrels oil per day (bopd) in May, and drop further to 6.1 million bpd in June, according to Rystad Energy.

“While this may seem like a drastic improvement from April, the oil market is not magically fixed,” said Rystad oil market analyst Louise Dickson. “The storage issue still looms large,” she said, referring to storage space around the world rapidly dwindling.

Prices are likely to fall further this year even as countries begin to ease restrictions imposed to counter the viral outbreak and the output cuts by big producers will not fix the supply glut, a Reuters poll showed on Thursday.

Some analysts estimate the shortfall is as much as around 30 million bpd of demand that has evaporated amid the coronavirus pandemic, with much of the world’s population still under some form of economic and social lockdown.

That dwarfs the nearly 10 million bpd cuts agreed between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other producers, reductions that officially kick in from Friday.

Underlining the difficulties some producers face, Iraq will struggle to meet its quota of cutting output by nearly a quarter, industry sources said, with oil majors that pump the lion’s share of the country’s production so far resisting calls for cuts.

Also supporting prices was data from the USEnergy Information Administration data showing crude inventories rose by 9 million barrels last week to 527.6 million barrels, less than the 10.6 million-barrel rise analysts had forecast in a Reuters poll.

“This is a second straight week of inventory and product demand figures suggesting a bottoming of the US market,” said Stephen Innes, chief market strategist at AxiCorp.

- Reuters