NEW YORK
(Reuters) - Oil prices slid on Friday, settling about 2.5 percent lower after a
consultancy forecast a rise in OPEC production for July despite the group's
pledge to curb output, reigniting concerns the global market will stay awash with crude.
pledge to curb output, reigniting concerns the global market will stay awash with crude.
Benchmark
Brent crude futures LCOc1 settled down $1.24 or 2.52 percent at $48.06 a
barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures CLc1 settled down
$1.15 or 2.45 percent, at $45.77 a barrel.
"This
turn around late in the week is suggestive that the concerns that drove us to
42 are still driving us lower," said Gene McGillian, manager of market
research at Tradition Energy.
Both Brent
and U.S. crude posted weekly losses of more than 1.6 percent after
Petro-Logistics said OPEC crude production would rise 145,000 barrels per day
(bpd) this month. Petro-Logistics, which tracks OPEC supply forecasts, said
this would take the group's combined output above 33 million bpd.
Higher
supply from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Nigeria would
drive this month's gains, it said.
OPEC and
some non-OPEC states, such as Russia, have been trying to cut production 1.8
million bpd through the end of March 2018.
On Monday
several ministers from OPEC and non-OPEC member countries will meet in St.
Petersburg. Kuwaiti Oil Minister Essam al-Marzouq, whose country heads the
joint ministerial committee, said attendees would discuss continuing the
production cuts.
The
committee can make recommendations to adjust the deal if needed, but analysts
expressed skepticism that the group will address rising production from Nigeria
and Libya, two OPEC members exempted from the cuts.
"There’s
no expectation... that there’s going to be anything of substance in that
meeting," said Dan Katzenberg, senior analyst at Baird and Co in New York.
U.S. oil
drillers cut one rig in the week to July 21, according to data from Baker
Hughes. Analysts said the decline was likely a pause in a drilling recovery
expected to continue through at least 2019.
Money
managers raised their net long U.S. crude futures and options positions in the
week to July 18 by 36,267 contracts, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) said.
The discount
of U.S. crude futures front-month versus the second-month CLc1-CLc2 briefly
fell to just 12 cents per barrel during the trading session, the lowest since
December 2014. This makes it less profitable for speculators to buy oil, sell
it forward and store it in the meantime.
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