SINGAPORE (Reuters)
- Oil prices fell 1 percent on Wednesday, with rising U.S. fuel inventories
pulling U.S. crude back below $50 per barrel, while ongoing high OPEC
supplies
weighed on international prices.
U.S. West
Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was at $48.69 per barrel at 0456 GMT, down 47
cents, or 1 percent, from its last settlement. That came after the contract
opened above $50 for the first time since May 25 on Tuesday.
Brent crude,
the international oil benchmark, was down 47 cents - almost 1 percent - at $51.31
per barrel.
The American
Petroleum Institute's (API) said that U.S. crude stocks rose by 1.8 million
barrels in the week ending July 28 to 488.8 million, denting hopes that recent
inventory draws were a sign of a tightening U.S. market.
Jeffrey
Halley of futures brokerage OANDA said following the API's report "traders
stampeded for the door to lock in profits from the last eight days'
bull-run."
Official
storage figures are due to be published by the U.S. Energy Information
Administration later on Wednesday.
Outside the
United States, Brent was pulled down by reports this week showing production
from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) at a 2017
high of 33 million barrels per day (bpd). That is despite OPEC's pledge to
restrict output along with other non-OPEC producers, including Russia, by 1.8
million bpd between January this year and March 2018.
The
Economist Intelligence Unit said that despite the cuts "the global market
remains oversupplied," and it warned that "there is no guarantee that
further cuts will be sufficient to rebalance the oversupplied global oil
market."
Energy
consultancy Douglas Westwood reckons that this year's oil market will be
slightly undersupplied but that the glut will return in 2018, and last to 2021.
"Oversupply
will actually return in 2018. This is due to the start-up of fields sanctioned
prior to the downturn," said Steve Robertson, head of research for the
firm's Global Oilfield Services. "This is in addition to the production gains
through increased investment and activity in the U.S. unconventional (shale)
space."
While
Robertson said unforeseen major supply disruptions could lift the market, he
warned that expectations based on thinking the price "always bounces back
should be tempered by a reality check," adding that there was "the
very real possibility that the current recovery could take much longer to
materialize".
Likely
acting as a further lid on prices is that, according to U.S. bank Goldman
Sachs, second quarter company results had shown that oil majors "are
adapting to $50 per barrel oil prices and can afford to pay dividends in
cash" at that level.
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