Oil
prices resumed their rise Thursday and held above the $50 barrier following
OPEC’s decision to carry out its first output cut in eight years.
The
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries at a meeting in Vienna
on Wednesday agreed on specific targets to enact a preliminary deal struck in
September designed to ease a global crude supply glut and boost prices.
Many
analysts had expected the producers’ cartel to fail to reach a deal as major
players like Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia remained divided ahead of the meeting.
Crude
futures prices surged more than 10 percent immediately after the OPEC deal.
At
0630 GMT Thursday, after a brief dip in early Asian trade, US benchmark West
Texas Intermediate for January delivery was up 70 cents or 1.42 percent at
$50.14, while Brent crude for February was 81 cents or 1.6 percent higher at
$52.65.
“Not
only had hopes of higher prices been realised, the reputation of the OPEC has
also been salvaged, prompting the surge,” said Jingyi Pan, market strategist at
IG in Singapore.
“Sceptics
have now placed their focus on the implementation of the OPEC deal where Saudi
Arabia will be shouldering the bulk of the cut.”
The
14-member OPEC agreed to lower its monthly output by 1.2 million barrels per
day (bpd) to 32.5 million bpd from January 1.
Qatar’s
Energy Minister Mohammed Bin Saleh Al-Sada said non-member Russia committed to
reducing its output by 300,000 bpd, half of a hoped-for 600,000 bpd reduction
from outside the organisation.
Prices
had fallen to near 13-year lows of below $30 a barrel in February from peaks of
more than $100 in June 2014 largely due to an oversupplied market outpacing
demand. - Punch
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