Brent rises toward $108; Libya, U.S. inventories in focus

Reuters , Friday 3 Jan 2014

Brent price increased after a significant drop as inventories in the U.S. decline and production does not resume at one of Libya largest oilfields

Brent crude rose towards $108 a barrel on Friday after posting its biggest daily percentage drop in six months in the previous session, although expectations for a rise in Libyan supply and speculation of a build up in U.S. stockpiles capped gains.
 
A rebalancing of commodity portfolios by asset managers also added to the volatility in oil prices.
 
Brent rose 16 cents to $107.94 by 0614 GMT after a 2.7 percent drop on Thursday, the largest since late June.
 
U.S. crude was at $95.31, down 13 cents, after earlier touching a one-month low of $95.13. The contract posted on Thursday its biggest daily fall since November 2012. 
 
The strong inventories decline that we had in recent weeks are very likely linked to tax management at year-end than true underlying strength in demand," said Mark Keenan, head of commodities research in Asia at Societe Generale, referring to U.S. crude stocks.
 
"There's been talk about how over the next few weeks there's going to be some heavy inventory builds."
A report by industry group Genscape showed a one million barrel rise in stockpiles at Cushing, Oklahoma, the benchmark delivery point for U.S. oil futures.
 
The United States could also tighten regulations on crude-by-rail shipments after an explosion in North Dakota on Monday. This may lead to higher transportation costs and create a supply glut that could depress U.S. crude prices, Phillip Futures analyst Tan Cheet Tat said.
 
Analysts however expect official U.S. weekly data, to be released later on Friday, to show a fifth consecutive draw in nationwide crude inventories.
 
Societe Generale's Keenan said asset managers were also rebalancing their portfolios, moving money from oil to metals.
"You can get some quite substantial moves especially with those markets that were up last year like crude oil," he said.
 
Oil prices could also be slightly more volatile this year than 2013 as supply may outweigh demand although geopolitical risks will underpin prices, Keenan said.
 
Investors are now watching production in Libya which has dropped to around 220,000 barrels per day (bpd), from 1.4 million bpd in July.
 
Libya hopes to resume production at one of its largest oilfields, El Sharara, within three days after protesters agreed to suspend their two-month stoppage, officials said on Thursday.
 
"We've had many false hopes from Libya in recent months. Until we see concrete evidence that production is actually up, I don't think we can ascribe too much importance to it," Keenan said.Brent crude rose towards $108 a barrel on Friday after posting its biggest daily percentage drop in six months in the previous session, although expectations for a rise in Libyan supply and speculation of a build up in U.S. stockpiles capped gains.
 
A rebalancing of commodity portfolios by asset managers also added to the volatility in oil prices.
 
Brent rose 16 cents to $107.94 by 0614 GMT after a 2.7 percent drop on Thursday, the largest since late June.
 
U.S. crude was at $95.31, down 13 cents, after earlier touching a one-month low of $95.13. The contract posted on Thursday its biggest daily fall since November 2012. 
 
The strong inventories decline that we had in recent weeks are very likely linked to tax management at year-end than true underlying strength in demand," said Mark Keenan, head of commodities research in Asia at Societe Generale, referring to U.S. crude stocks.
 
"There's been talk about how over the next few weeks there's going to be some heavy inventory builds."
A report by industry group Genscape showed a one million barrel rise in stockpiles at Cushing, Oklahoma, the benchmark delivery point for U.S. oil futures.
 
The United States could also tighten regulations on crude-by-rail shipments after an explosion in North Dakota on Monday. This may lead to higher transportation costs and create a supply glut that could depress U.S. crude prices, Phillip Futures analyst Tan Cheet Tat said.
 
Analysts however expect official U.S. weekly data, to be released later on Friday, to show a fifth consecutive draw in nationwide crude inventories.
 
Societe Generale's Keenan said asset managers were also rebalancing their portfolios, moving money from oil to metals.
"You can get some quite substantial moves especially with those markets that were up last year like crude oil," he said.
 
Oil prices could also be slightly more volatile this year than 2013 as supply may outweigh demand although geopolitical risks will underpin prices, Keenan said.
 
Investors are now watching production in Libya which has dropped to around 220,000 barrels per day (bpd), from 1.4 million bpd in July.
 
Libya hopes to resume production at one of its largest oilfields, El Sharara, within three days after protesters agreed to suspend their two-month stoppage, officials said on Thursday.
 
"We've had many false hopes from Libya in recent months. Until we see concrete evidence that production is actually up, I don't think we can ascribe too much importance to it," Keenan said.
Short link: