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Oil rises to $73 on report of Russia, Saudi output cut talks

PetroChina agrees 2019 annual crude supply deals with Saudi Aramco, Kuwait


November 08, 2018 00:00:00


LONDON, Nov 07 (Reuters): Oil rebounded to $73 a barrel on Wednesday after falling to its lowest since August, supported by a report that Russia and Saudi Arabia are discussing oil output cuts in 2019.

Russia's TASS news agency, citing an unnamed source, reported that the two countries, the biggest producers in an OPEC-led alliance that has been limiting supply since 2017, have started bilateral talks on the issue.

"I think this is a little bit of verbal intervention, trying to get some speculative length back into the market," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix. "The global supply and demand balance does not look very tight next year."

Brent crude LCOc1, the global benchmark, rose $1.04 to $73.17 a barrel by 1057 GMT. The contract hit $71.18 on Tuesday, its lowest since Aug. 16. US crude CLc1 rose 68 cents to $62.89.

While Iranian oil exports are expected to fall because of US sanctions that took effect on Monday, reports from OPEC and other forecasters have indicated that the global market could see a 2019 supply surplus as demand slows.

A ministerial committee of some Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries members and allies, including Russia and Saudi Arabia, is due to meet on Sunday in Abu Dhabi to discuss the market and outlook for 2019.

Any return to limiting supply would follow a June decision by the OPEC-led group to relax output curbs in place since 2017, after pressure from US President Donald Trump to cool prices and make up for losses from Iran.

Supply from countries such as Saudi Arabia has risen sharply since June. In addition, having initially talked of cutting Iranian oil shipments to zero, Washington gave waivers to eight customers, raising the prospect of more Iranian oil in the market than expected.

Earlier in the session on Wednesday, oil traded lower as rising US inventories and sanction waivers allowing Iran to keep exporting crude reinforced an outlook for ample supplies.

Another report from Shanghai adds: Chinese oil major PetroChina inked 2019 annual crude supply deals with state-owned producers Saudi Aramco and Kuwait Petroleum Corp on Wednesday at a public signing ceremony during the China International Import Expo in Shanghai.

Volumes covered by the supply contracts weren't made public, but a person with knowledge of the terms said Aramco would supply the same volume as in 2018.

Kuwait volumes were expected to be steady with this year's level, two sources said, while a third expected a slight increase.


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