Oil Crashes as OPEC Maintains Output
Oil is trading in a bear
market amid signs that U.S. output is expanding even after the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries opted not to reduce its production target. The
12-member group is responsible for about 40 percent
of the world’s supply. Falling prices will put “short-term pressure” on Iran’s
budget, President Hassan Rouhani said in parliament
on 7 December.
“This is primarily a
supply-side issue,” Ric Spooner, a chief strategist
at CMC Markets in Sydney, said by phone today. “Current supplies are too large
for any foreseeable improvement in demand. The price needs to fall to a level
that starts to really give the market some comfort that new projects are going
to be put on the backburner and delayed.”
WTI for January delivery
dropped as much as $1.21 to $64.63 a barrel in electronic trading on the New
York Mercantile Exchange and was at $65.18. It slid 97 cents to $65.84 on Dec.
5, the lowest close since July 2009. The volume of all futures traded was about
9 percent above the 100-day average. Prices have
decreased 34 percent this year.
Rig Count
The number of U.S. rigs in
operation rose to 1,575 through Dec. 5, the first gain in three weeks,
according to Baker Hughes, a Houston-based field services company. The nation’s
oil boom has been driven by a combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic
fracturing, which has unlocked supplies from shale formations including the Eagle
Ford in Texas and the Bakken in North Dakota.
U.S. oil production
accelerated to 9.08 million barrels a day through Nov. 28, according to data
from the Energy Information Administration data. That’s the fastest rate in
weekly records that started in January 1983.
OPEC Quota
Saudi Arabia led OPEC’s
decision to maintain output at a meeting in Vienna, citing the threat from U.S.
shale, Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar
Zanganeh said on Nov. 28. The group pumped 30.56
million barrels a day in November, exceeding its quota of 30 million for a
sixth straight month.
In Algeria, another OPEC
member, Sonatrach will press ahead with its $90
billion investment plan in the country’s oil and gas industry even as crude
trades near five-year lows, Said Sahnoun, the interim
chief executive officer of the state-run energy producer, said at a conference
in Algiers on 7 December.
China, the world’s
second-biggest oil consumer, imported 25.41 million metric tons of crude last
month, according to preliminary data from the General Administration of Customs
in Beijing on 8 December. Shipments increased to about 6.21 million barrels a
day, up 9 percent from a month earlier.