Oil holds below $60 a barrel as pace of US drilling cuts slows
WTI for June delivery was up 19 cents at $59.88 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange
Melbourne: Oil held near $60 a barrel as price volatility shrank to the lowest in six months amid speculation over the pace of production growth in the US.
Futures were little changed in New York after capping a three-day drop on Friday. A gauge of oil volatility slid 14.7% last week, the most since September 2013. The number of active US rigs drilling for crude slipped by eight to 660 through 15 May, the smallest reduction in 23 weeks of declines, data from Baker Hughes Inc. show.
Oil’s recovery from a six-year low is stalling near $60 a barrel amid speculation rising prices will encourage production and sustain a supply glut. US crude inventories are more than 100 million barrels above the five-year average for this time of year, according to government data.
“The market seems happy to stay around this area until it sees some movement on U.S. production," Ric Spooner, a chief strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney, said by phone. “Time may ultimately prove to be a problem. If we don’t start to see output drop away more significantly in the coming weeks, the market may begin to get nervous about it."
West Texas Intermediate for June delivery, which expires Tuesday, was up 19 cents at $59.88 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 2:19 pm Sydney time. The contract slid 19 cents to $59.69 on Friday. The volume of all futures traded was about 53% below the 100-day average. The more-active July futures were 16 cents higher at $60.70.
Rig count
Brent for July settlement gained 14 cents to $66.95 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. Prices gained 2.2% last week. The European benchmark crude traded at a premium of $6.31 to WTI for the same month.
The Chicago Board Options Exchange Crude Oil Volatility Index slumped 8.2% on Friday, capping a seventh weekly drop. The gauge of hedging costs on the US Oil Fund, the biggest exchange-traded fund tracking crude futures, closed at 29.95, the lowest since 7 November.
The US drill rig count has dropped 58% since 5 December, according to data from Baker Hughes. The number of active machines at the nation’s biggest oil field, the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico, fell by three to 233.
The US pumped 9.37 million barrels a day in the week ended 8 May, the Energy Information Administration said 13 May. Output averaged 9.42 million a day in the week to 20 March, the fastest pace since at least January 1983.
Bullish bets
Global oil supply is exceeding demand by as much as 2 million barrels a day, Tim Cutt, the president of BHP Billiton Ltd.’s petroleum division, said in a speech Monday.
Speculators trimmed their bullish bets amid speculation supply will rise from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec). Long wagers fell the most in two months and short bets dropped to the lowest since August, according to US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.
Demand for Opec’s crude will rise as current prices hinder shale output expansions, said the chief executive officer of Qatar Petroleum International, according to an official news agency report.
While prices will improve during “the coming period," they will not reach $100 a barrel, Qatar Petroleum CEO Nasser Khalil Al-Jaidah said in an interview published Saturday by the official Qatar News Agency. Oil has stabilized since December because of higher demand from Europe and emerging markets, and lower US output, Al-Jaidah said. Bloomberg
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