A looming rise in Middle East output capped gains, but
investor sentiment held the optimism that has helped lift oil futures
nearly 80 percent higher than January lows.
Brent futures were trading at US$48.35 a barrel at 0949 GMT
(4:49 a.m. ET), up 21 cents from their last close. U.S. crude was up 45
cents at US$46.48 a barrel, with both contracts hitting 2016 highs.
Investment bank Jeffries on Friday said the market "is
coming into better balance" and would flip into undersupply in the
second half of the year.
But others warned that the rally was too soon, and driven in large part by investors taking speculative positions on oil.
"The issue is that we haven't seen price rallies ...
correlate with fundamentals," said Hamza Khan, senior commodity
strategist at ING. "The fundamentals - high stocks, high production -
haven't changed."
Deutsche Bank said a looming rise in production by the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries - due to climbing
Iranian output and following outages in Iraq, Nigeria and the United
Arab Emirates - could cap recent price rises.
Additionally, Saudi output is expected to edge up by 350,000
barrels to around 10.5 million barrels per day, sources told Reuters,
just as tankers filled with unsold oil are at sea seeking buyers.
Still, falling production outside OPEC, notably in the
United States, has raised hopes that the worst of the nearly two-year
excess of oil was over.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a note that "non-OPEC
oil supply is indeed hanging off a cliff", and estimated that global
output would contract on the year in April or May for the first time
since 2013.
A weakening dollar, which has fallen 6 percent this year
against a basket of other leading currencies , helped support oil, as it
makes dollar-priced crude cheaper for holders of other currencies.
There are also growing risks that production in OPEC member
Venezuela could decline. Risk consultancy Eurasia Group said the state
was running out of cash to keep its oil pumps running.
"Mounting problems will probably lead to a decline of 100,000–150,000 bpd this year," Eurasia Group said.
(Editing by Dale Hudson)
- Reuters
Oil prices hit new 2016 highs despite lingering excess
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