Agence France-Presse 02:28 PM August 24th, 2016
http://business.inquirer.net/214000/oil-prices-asia-brent-stays-50
SINGAPORE,
Singapore—Oil fell in Asia on Wednesday after industry data showing an increase
in US crude stocks added to oversupply worries and traders took advantage of a
recent rally to book profits.
Prices had closed
higher Tuesday on news that Iran was willing to join calls by OPEC and Russia
for production curbs after scuttling previous efforts to reach a deal in April.
But the gains were
reversed in Asian trade after data from the American Petroleum Institute (API)
overnight showed US crude inventories rose by 4.5 million barrels in the week
ending August 19, after falling by one million barrels the week before.
Rising stocks indicate
weaker demand in the world’s top oil consuming nation and add to worries about
a global crude supply glut.
“This jawboning (of oil
prices) looks like it is rapidly being reversed in the wake of the weekly US
API inventories number,” said Angus Nicholson, a Melbourne-based analyst with
IG Markets.
A similar decline when
the US energy department releases the official data on US commercial crude
inventories later Wednesday could see WTI “pull back to the $45 handle,” he
said in a note.
At around 0430 GMT, US
benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for October delivery was down 73 cents
or 1.52 percent to $47.37, and Brent crude for October dropped 61 cents or 1.22
percent to $49.35 a barrel.
Jeffrey Halley, a
senior market analyst at OANDA, said Wednesday’s decline is due to traders
taking advantage of the recent spike to sell positions they had bought earlier
in the hope prices would go higher.
“For any pop up in oil
prices, there are plenty of eager sellers wanting to reduce their long
positions ahead of the OPEC meeting,” Halley told AFP.
Members of the Organization
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries led by Saudi Arabia and non-members like
Russia are to meet informally next month in Algeria and are expected to discuss
ways to stabilise the oversupplied crude market.
Iran has reportedly
indicated it will attend the meeting but Nicholson said that “attendance does
not mean they are ready to commit to a deal.”
“And when Iraq and
Saudi Arabia are producing at record levels, it is difficult to see Iran being
happy to produce well below their potential,” he added.
Tehran had balked at
joining freeze calls earlier this year, saying it needed to raise production
levels which had been crippled by years of Western economic sanctions, lifted
only in January.
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