FX WES
Friday, 4 December 2015
Crude oil rises while US dollar is close to one-month low
Crude oil
prices
are growing
today
as
OPEC ministers met in Vienna
,
while US dollar is close to
one-month lows a day after staging its largest one-day fall in nearly seven years.
Brent crude oil futures LCOc1 were last up 65 cents at $44.49 a barrel at 1100 GMT (0600 EDT), having fallen earlier this week to a low of $42.43, within cents of August's 6-1/2 year trough.
U.S. crude futures CLc1 were up 55 cents at $41.63.
In the last few weeks, investors have run up big bearish bets, or short positions, betting on a fall in the price of crude oil, which could be rapidly unwound if OPEC were to give any signal that it might adjust its stance on supply.
The dollar .DXY rose, which would ordinarily depress oil prices as this strength can encourage non-U.S. investors in crude to sell their holdings in exchange for a higher profit in their own currency.
But Thursday's 2-percent slide in the greenback, triggered by a surging euro, left the dollar near its weakest in a month, ahead of the monthly U.S. jobs report that could cement expectations for the first U.S. rate rise in nearly a decade from the Federal Reserve this month.
In Vienna, OPEC's poorer members have been piling pressure on their richer counterparts led by Saudi Arabia to cut supply, but Riyadh and its allies appeared on Friday to be ready to stick to their strategy of protecting market share.
"What OPEC have on their side is the market is in quite a bearish mode, so there are quite a few shorts out there ... if we see anything that resembles a move towards stabilizing the price, then we could see (oil) move 20 or 25 percent higher within a very short period of time" he said.
Saudi Arabian oil minister Ali al-Naimi said ahead of the meeting growing global demand could absorb an expected jump in Iranian production next year.
On the demand side, China is likely to double its strategic crude oil purchases next year to take advantage of a more than a 60 percent fall in oil prices since June 2014.
Beijing will add 70-90 million barrels ofcrude to storage tanks in 2016 to build up its strategic petroleum reserves(SPR), according to most respondents in a poll of five analysts and datacollected by Reuters analysts.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment