Oil rises on speculation Opec+ could spurn pressure to boost output
President Joe Biden criticised Saudi Arabia and Russia for an inadequate response to the energy crunch
01 November 2021 - 14:37
byElizabeth Low and Paul Burkhardt
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Oil rose on speculation Opec+ could spurn mounting pressure to boost production at a faster clip, even as consumption roars ahead of supply.
Global benchmark Brent added 1%, reversing an earlier loss. Speaking after a Group of 20 summit on Sunday, US President Joe Biden criticised Saudi Arabia and Russia for an inadequate response to the energy crunch, while declining to say what he’d do if producers don’t act. Timespreads pointed to a tight market.
Crude has soared this year as economies recover from the pandemic, boosting consumption. An energy squeeze marked by shortages of gas and coal has also stoked oil demand. Still, Opec and its allies have loosened supply curbs only gradually, and top exporter Saudi Arabia has maintained a cautious stance ahead of this week’s Opec+ meeting.
Despite US pressure, the cartel’s preference “is to go with a prudent approach, and that keeps the oil market tighter for now,” said Giovanni Staunovo, a commodity analyst at UBS Group.
China Move
Over the weekend, China said it would release state reserves of diesel and gasoline to ease shortages. The move is a part of an annual rotation of holdings, but the government has given neither volumes nor a schedule.
The tightness in the crude market is reflected in deeply backward-dated pricing patterns, with traders willing to pay a premium for near-term supply. Brent’s prompt spread was $1.26 a barrel on Monday, up from 82 cents a week ago.
Opec+ is scheduled to gather virtually on Thursday, and may stick with a planned monthly increase of only 400,000 barrels a day despite the escalating concerns from top consumers. Angola and Iraq were the latest members of the alliance to affirm their support for the current conservative stance on output.
Goldman Sachs estimates global demand exceeded supply by 2.5-million barrels a day last month, describing the deficit as “unresolved” in an October 29 note. The bank stuck with a forecast that Brent will hit $90 a barrel.
The increasingly blunt sparring over Opec+ production comes as world leaders convene for a critical UN conference aimed at limiting the use of fossil fuels. In the run-up to COP26, the G-20 summit in Rome produced only a tepid climate agreement, leaving it to negotiators at the Glasgow gathering to try to achieve a breakthrough.
Bloomberg. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Oil rises on speculation Opec+ could spurn pressure to boost output
President Joe Biden criticised Saudi Arabia and Russia for an inadequate response to the energy crunch
Oil rose on speculation Opec+ could spurn mounting pressure to boost production at a faster clip, even as consumption roars ahead of supply.
Global benchmark Brent added 1%, reversing an earlier loss. Speaking after a Group of 20 summit on Sunday, US President Joe Biden criticised Saudi Arabia and Russia for an inadequate response to the energy crunch, while declining to say what he’d do if producers don’t act. Timespreads pointed to a tight market.
Crude has soared this year as economies recover from the pandemic, boosting consumption. An energy squeeze marked by shortages of gas and coal has also stoked oil demand. Still, Opec and its allies have loosened supply curbs only gradually, and top exporter Saudi Arabia has maintained a cautious stance ahead of this week’s Opec+ meeting.
Despite US pressure, the cartel’s preference “is to go with a prudent approach, and that keeps the oil market tighter for now,” said Giovanni Staunovo, a commodity analyst at UBS Group.
China Move
Over the weekend, China said it would release state reserves of diesel and gasoline to ease shortages. The move is a part of an annual rotation of holdings, but the government has given neither volumes nor a schedule.
The tightness in the crude market is reflected in deeply backward-dated pricing patterns, with traders willing to pay a premium for near-term supply. Brent’s prompt spread was $1.26 a barrel on Monday, up from 82 cents a week ago.
Opec+ is scheduled to gather virtually on Thursday, and may stick with a planned monthly increase of only 400,000 barrels a day despite the escalating concerns from top consumers. Angola and Iraq were the latest members of the alliance to affirm their support for the current conservative stance on output.
Goldman Sachs estimates global demand exceeded supply by 2.5-million barrels a day last month, describing the deficit as “unresolved” in an October 29 note. The bank stuck with a forecast that Brent will hit $90 a barrel.
The increasingly blunt sparring over Opec+ production comes as world leaders convene for a critical UN conference aimed at limiting the use of fossil fuels. In the run-up to COP26, the G-20 summit in Rome produced only a tepid climate agreement, leaving it to negotiators at the Glasgow gathering to try to achieve a breakthrough.
Bloomberg. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
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