After a volatile week’s trading, much is riding on Sunday’s meeting between Venezuelan Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino and his Saudi counterpart Ali al-Naimi in Riyadh, after Del Pino’s discussions with the Qatari and Omani ministers this week.
As cash-strapped Venezuela tries to rally support for concerted action between members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to boost prices, Sunday’s meeting is seen “make or break” for a possible deal, said Tim Evans, energy futures specialist at Citi Futures. Adding to this week’s rollercoaster ride in prices was the sudden liquidation of a $600 million leveraged fund bet on falling prices.
The pickup in the market earlier this week was not really warranted, Gene McGillian, senior analyst at Tradition Energy said, referring to the market seemingly brushing aside extremely bearish inventory data earlier this week.
“Today when the dollar tried to push up, which I attribute mostly to a little weekend covering, you started to see some sellers come back in the oil markets,” he said.
Global benchmark Brent crude futures settled down 40 cents, or 1.2 per cent at $34.06 a barrel, after trading between $35.14 and $33.81.
US crude futures closed 83 cents, or 2.6 per cent lower, at $30.89 a barrel, after touching a high of $32.45. The contract fell slightly lower to $30.63 in post-settlement trading. Prices briefly turned positive after data showed US energy firms this week deepened their oil rig cuts in the seventh week of declines, to the lowest levels in nearly six years.
Both contracts were stuck in a narrow $1.50 range through the session but ended lower as hopes of an OPEC-led production cut that boosted prices in January have faded and concerns about a global supply glut have returned.
In a sign that low prices are having a limited impact on production, only around 100,000 barrels per day of oil production has been shut in globally to date - about 0.1% of global output, industry research group Wood Mackenzie said on Friday.
Morgan Stanley warned on Friday that a rebalancing in the oil market may not occur until mid-2017.
As markets try to balance themselves, it will likely lead to further volatility as investors close excessive positions, ABN Amro said in a note.
In a sign that optimism had not fully returned to the market, money managers cut their bullish wagers on US crude oil in the week to February 2, data from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) showed on Friday.