Oil markets trading in range amid mixed supply signals


FE Team | Published: August 28, 2018 13:03:03 | Updated: August 30, 2018 20:18:37


An oil pump jack of Canadian group Vermilion Energy is pictured in Parentis-en-Born, France, October 13, 2017. Reuters/Files

Oil prices were steady on Tuesday, capped by gradually rising output from producer club OPEC and supported by perceived supply risks from places such as Venezuela, Africa and Iran.

International Brent crude oil futures were at $76.21 per barrel at 0542 GMT, unchanged from their last close.

US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were down 4.0 cents at $68.83 per barrel.

Traders said markets were range-bound, hemmed in by conflicting price signals.

The monitoring committee of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) found that oil producers participating in a supply-reduction agreement, which includes non-OPEC member Russia, cut output in July by 9.0 per cent more than called for.

The findings for last month compare with a compliance level of 120 per cent for June and 147 percent for May, meaning participants have been steadily increasing production.

OPEC and its allies agreed in late 2016 to cut output from 2017 by around 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) versus October 2016 levels.

Concerns about an economic slowdown because of trade conflict between the United States and China also continued to weigh on global markets, traders said.

However, the International Energy Agency (IEA) on Monday warned of further supply disruptions, especially from Venezuela, where an economic crisis has cut deep into the OPEC-member’s oil output.

Venezuelan crude oil exports had halved in the previous two years to just 1 million bpd by mid-2018, according to trade flow data.

“We can expect a further fall,” the IEA’s Executive Director Fatih Birol told Reuters in Norway on Monday.

Birol also warned that African OPEC-members Libya and Nigeria “seem both still fragile countries” despite some recent improvements, according to Reuters news agency.

Birol said it was too early to gauge the impact of the US sanctions that will target Iran from November.

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