12:19 PM April 22nd, 2016
The exporting group’s
Secretary-General Abdalla El-Badri said it could revive the discussion among
members and hold further talks with non-members. OPEC holds its next
twice-yearly meeting on June 2.
A much-vaunted
meeting Sunday in Doha collapsed after kingpin Saudi Arabia pulled out owing to
bitter rival Iran’s refusal to join in output limits. Tehran said it was still
in the process of raising production after the removal of nuclear-linked
Western sanctions in January.
At around 0330 GMT
Friday, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for delivery in June was up
54 cents, or 1.25 percent, at $43.72 and Brent crude for June climbed 49 cents,
or 1.10 percent, to $45.02 a barrel.
WTI is up more than
eight percent and Brent 4.5 percent from last Friday’s close.
“The market is
reacting to hopes that there will be more talks to discuss freezing output
measures to support oil prices,” Bernard Aw, an analyst with IG Markets
Singapore, told AFP.
“But in my view, the
failure of the previous talks in Doha has damaged OPEC’s credibility,” Aw said,
adding he was not hopeful of an agreement in June.
However, BMI Research
warned in a note that the long-running enmity between Iran and Saudi Arabia—who
are fighting proxy wars in the Middle East—could prevent any deal being made.
“We believe that
Saudi Arabia and Iran’s disagreement over oil is a symptom of wider
geopolitical tensions between the two, and therefore do not expect a political
OPEC agreement to be reached during the June 2 meeting,” it said.
“The feud between
Riyadh and Tehran runs deep, as both compete for regional political and religious
hegemony.”
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