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Sunday, November 24, 2024

Crude extends rally as output cuts begin 

Oil prices rallied Friday as massive output cuts began to kick in and top producers said they would turn the taps lower, while there were also hopes for a pick-up in demand as economies slowly reopen.

After a diabolical month for the commodity in which the May WTI contract fell to a mind-boggling minus $40, investors were a little more upbeat about the outlook, though analysts warned the market was not yet out of the woods.

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In early trade, US benchmark WTI for June was up almost five percent at $19.75, having piled on 25 percent in each of the previous two days.

Brent for July delivery gained 2.4 percent to $27.12 on its first day of trading, with the June contract closing without any of the flurry of selling suffered by US oil two weeks ago.

The gains this week are in line with strong advances across equity markets, which have been fuelled by signs of a slowing of coronavirus infections and deaths in some of the worst-hit nations.

The uptick has also been sustained by governments beginning to ease lockdown restrictions that have hammered oil demand for months.

News that US stockpiles had risen slower than expected last week, as well as a surprise drop in gasoline reserves also provided support.

"Demand has most likely troughed with several large economies now considering 'exit strategies' or 'new normal' and lifting draconian lockdown restrictions," said AxiCorp analyst Stephen Innes.

Optimism has also been boosted by news of successful early testing of a possible virus treatment in the United States.

Output cuts of 10 million barrels a day agreed by OPEC and other top producers will start Friday, though some countries had already started earlier this week. 

Norway, which was not part of that deal, said it would slash 250,000 barrels from its daily output in June, while ConocoPhillips said it would chop 400,000 barrels a day.

However, with US storage facilities near bursting and demand still pummelled, Citigroup warned of further volatility before the oil market enjoys some sort of stability. With Bloomberg News                 

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