Crude
prices rose Tuesday as traders awaited this weekend’s summit of key oil
producers to discuss freezing output levels and easing the supply glut. At
around 1100 GMT US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in May was up
28 cents at $40.64 per barrel, having earlier touched a three-week high at
$40.91.
Brent crude for June delivery was trading 48 cents higher at $43.31 a
barrel. The contract had earlier forged a 4.5-month peak at $43.58. The oil
market had also risen on Monday after soaring eight percent or more last week.
“Market participants are viewing (recent) price falls as a good opportunity to
buy,” said Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch. “The expectation that oil
producers will agree on production caps at their meeting in Doha this Sunday is
also bound to be playing its part,” he added.
A chronic worldwide supply glut
sent oil prices collapsing by three quarters in value between August 2014 and
February this year, when they struck near 13-year low points. Analysts expect
prices to see-saw before Sunday’s meeting in the Qatari capital Doha that will
bring together both OPEC producers led by Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC members
such as Russia. A major topic is a proposal to freeze output at January levels
to try to ease oversupply. Oanda analyst Craig Erlam said traders were
meanwhile awaiting weekly US inventories data due Tuesday from industry body
the American Petroleum Institute (API).
“This week oil traders will primarily
be focused on the meeting of oil producers in Doha, but another draw down today
could spur another rally in the meantime,” Erlam said. Barclays Research said
the oil market was expected to remain “neutral” until after the April 17
summit. “We expect better directional momentum after the meeting of OPEC and
non-OPEC countries,” it said in a commentary. However, Barclays noted that the
“current expectation is for their actions to have limited impact given the lack
of involvement in the freeze of producers that have the potential to grow
output.”
Key OPEC member Iran has been raising output since nuclear-linked
Western sanctions were lifted in January and has signaled it will not join the
freeze calls. Some analysts have said only a production cut, rather than a mere
freeze, could permanently boost prices amid weak demand in the over saturated
market. “Supply outages and adjustments to output in response to lower oil prices
are helping to tighten market balances,” Barclays said.

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