Oil's Weekly Move Muted as OPEC Cuts Seen Challenged by Supply

04:19 PM @ Friday - 15 December, 2017

Oil is little changed for the week as the International Energy Agency and OPEC forecast a boost in supply from outside the producer group next year, putting pressure on efforts to clear a global glut.

Futures rose 0.4 percent in New York, trimming the weekly loss to 0.2 percent. While a surplus in developed markets has dropped to a two-year low, new output from competitors including U.S. shale might grow fasterthan demand in 2018, the IEA said Thursday. OPEC said Wednesday oil markets won’t rebalance until late next year after increasing forecasts for supplies from its rivals.

Oil has averaged about $50 a barrel this year, the highest since 2014, as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies including Russia trim output to drain oversupply. While the group has extended cuts through to the end of 2018, they face rising production from the U.S. that’s forecast to surge above 10 million barrels a day next year to a record.

“Supply is the wild card going into next year,” said Barnabas Gan, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. “Inventory levels have narrowed substantially since the start of the year and we look for that to continue into 2018. The recent price rally still appears fragile, so anything that possibly feeds the glut will be a strong impetus to drive oil lower.”

West Texas Intermediate for January delivery was at $57.24 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up 20 cents, at 7:46 a.m. in London. Total volume traded was about 29 percent above the 100-day average. Prices gained 44 cents to $57.04 on Thursday.

Brent for February settlement added 9 cents to $63.40 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange after climbing 1.4 percent on Thursday. Prices are little changed for the week and up about 11 percent this year. The global benchmark crude traded at a premium of $6.12 to February WTI.

Inventories in developed nations, OPEC’s key metric for assessing oversupply, have fallen to their lowest since July 2015 after a further decline in October, the IEA said in its monthly report. The agency bolstered forecasts for growth in supplies outside OPEC next year by 200,000 barrels a day. - Bloomberg -