Oil headed for its longest run of gains this year as Libya’s
biggest oil field was said to have suffered another outage while Russia
signaled it’s weighing an extension of OPEC-led production cuts.
Futures
gained for a fifth day in New York after advancing 3.2 percent last week
following a U.S. military strike on Syria. Libya’s Sharara field stopped
producing just one week after it reopened, according to two people familiar with
the matter, although it wasn’t clear why. Russia’s energy ministry has been in
discussions with oil companies regarding the need to prolong the six-month deal
when it expires, Energy Minister Alexander Novak said Friday.
“Libyan
production is back to square one,” said Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS
Group AG in Zurich.
West Texas
Intermediate for May delivery rose as much as 38 cents to $52.62 a barrel on
the New York Mercantile Exchange and was at $52.59 at 9:39 a.m. in London.
Total volume traded was about 12 percent above the 100-day average. The
contract gained 54 cents to $52.24 on Friday.
Output Cuts
Brent for
June settlement climbed as much as 45 cents, or 0.8 percent, to $55.69 a barrel
on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. Prices increased 35 cents to
$55.24 on Friday. The global benchmark crude was at a premium of $2.67 to June
WTI.
Russia, which pledged to trim output by as much as 300,000 barrels
a day by the end of this month, will make a decision on prolonging supply curbs
after “monitoring results in April and May,” according to Deputy Prime Minister
Arkady Dvorkovich. Cuts so far haven’t delivered the expected price boost, he
said at an energy ministry conference in Moscow on Friday. While the nation
isn’t a member of OPEC, Russia and 10 other countries joined the group in
cutting output from January.
Oil-market news:
·
In the U.S., companies increased the rig count to the highest
since August 2015. U.S. drillers targeting crude added 10 rigs to 672,
according to data Friday from Baker Hughes Inc.
·
Iran reduced light oil pricing for May to customers in Asia,
according to an official from state-run National Iranian Oil Co., who asked not
be identified because the information is confidential.
Source: Bloomberg

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