Oil mixed in Asian trade | Inquirer Business

Oil mixed in Asian trade

/ 11:53 AM October 27, 2014

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SINGAPORE – Oil was mixed in Asian trade Monday but remained subdued with no signs the world’s key crude producers will cut output in the face of a supply glut, analysts said.

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in December was up one cent to $81.02 a barrel in late-morning Asian trade, reversing earlier losses, while Brent crude for December eased 25 cents to $85.88.

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Both contracts were down Friday, resuming their slide following a rebound the day before as traders shrugged off reports of a supply cutback in September by oil kingpin Saudi Arabia.

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World oil prices have fallen by a quarter since June as excess supply and weaker demand led to a glut on global markets, prompting some other exporters to call for cuts in output.

Analysts said however there were no indications of a production cut, and investors were looking for further developments during a meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) next month.

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“This year, global commercial oil stocks have surpassed the 5.0 billion barrel mark, growing at a rate of 1.16 million barrels per day on average over the first three quarters of this year,” British bank Barclays said in a research note.

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“Such is the surplus in the market that is weighing on prices.”

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It said that “the absence of an official policy statement, especially from Saudi Arabia in response to the fall in oil prices has left a void in guidance.”

“This void has thus far been filled by a string of unsubstantiated assumptions in various press reports, as well as an extrapolation of the kingdom’s crude pricing and production data,” it added.

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Phillip Futures said in a note that in the coming week, “it is unlikely that supply and demand factors would change”.

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TAGS: Asia, Business, economy, oil, OPEC, Trade

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