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Oil Falls Below $70 as Saudi Arabia Sees Oil Supply Increase


These translations are done via Google Translate
May 25, 2018 by Grant Smith and Sharon Cho
(Bloomberg) 

Oil fell below $70 a barrel in New York for the first time in two weeks as Saudi Arabia said it expects OPEC and its partners to increase supplies later this year, easing some of the restraint they’ve shown since early 2017.

U.S. futures fell as much as 2.1 percent, set for the first weekly drop this month. There will likely be a gradual supply boost in the second half, Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said in St. Petersburg, as OPEC and its partners acknowledge consumer anxieties after prices reached a three-year high. The comments were echoed by his Russian counterpart, Alexander Novak.

“The size of the supply increase is still a question mark, but otherwise there can be no doubt anymore that Saudi Arabia and Russia will be increasing supplies in the second half,” said Olivier Jakob, managing director at consultants Petromatrix GmbH in Zug, Switzerland.

Oil has been trading near a 3 1/2-year high on concern about the potential supply disruptions from Venezuela and Iran. The rally has sparked concern that demand may falter, and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies appear to be reacting, with the first offer to boost output since January 2017.

West Texas Intermediate for July delivery traded at $69.31 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down $1.40, at 10:54 a.m. in London. The contract lost 1.6 percent to $70.71 on Thursday. Prices have declined $1.99 this week. Total volume traded was about 52 percent above the 100-day average.

Fluor

Brent futures for July settlement traded at $77.04 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange, down $1.75 and headed for a weekly drop for the first time in seven weeks. The global benchmark crude traded $7.81 above WTI for the same month, after closing at the biggest premium since April 2015 on Thursday.

OPEC+ Talks

Futures for September delivery fell 1.6 percent to 477.4 yuan a barrel in afternoon trading on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange. Prices are down 1.9 percent this week. The contract rose 0.1 percent to 485 yuan on Thursday.

OPEC and its allies will discuss easing the curbs in June, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said in a joint interview with Al-Falih. The two producers plan to have at least two more meetings ahead of a group gathering in Vienna next month, the Saudi minister said in the interview early Friday in St. Petersburg.

Other oil-market news:

Exxon Mobil Corp. sees acquisitions as “few and far between” over the coming year, despite a boost in its spending budget, as rising oil prices mean sellers are demanding high buy-ins, Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods said in an interview. The rise in oil prices to $80 a barrel is starting to cause concern across boardrooms, with some big industrial consumers, including airlines and shipping companies, starting to buy more insurance against rising energy prices. Gasoline futures in New York were set for the first weekly decline since early May, and traded at $2.1955 a gallon.



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