Oil rises on expectations of market balance, slower shale growth

Grant Smith January 23, 2019

LONDON (Bloomberg) -- Oil recovered after its biggest decline in more than a week on signs U.S. shale supply growth is slowing, and expectations that OPEC’s output cuts are well on their way to balancing the market. 

West Texas Intermediate futures added 0.8%, having slipped more than 2% on Tuesday. Growth in U.S. shale output is set to slow next month, according to the Energy Information Administration. BP CEO Bob Dudley said that production cuts by OPEC and its allies should eventually lead to a balanced oil market in 2019.

“The oil market is set to be dominated by a much tighter balance in 2019,” said Helge Andre Martinsen, senior oil analyst at DNB ASA.

Crude has got off to its best start to a year since 2001 on hopes OPEC and allied producers will cut enough output to shrink a glut. However, forecasts for slower global economic growth are threatening that rally. A sharp slowdown, led by China, could weigh heavily on oil consumption even though demand is continuing to increase, International Energy Agency Executive Director Fatih Birol said.

West Texas Intermediate crude for March delivery traded $0.41 higher at $53.42/bbl on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The February contract expired on Tuesday after slumping 2.3% to $52.57/bbl.

Brent for March settlement rose $0.47 to $61.97/bbl on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange after dropping 2% on Tuesday. The global benchmark crude was at an $8.58 premium to WTI.

Global oil demand remains on course to expand “above or around” 1 MMbpd, but “there are of course a couple of uncertainties, including the weakening of the global economic growth, especially China,” Birol said in a Bloomberg television interview in Davos, Switzerland.

OPEC and its allies are probably doing enough to balance crude supply and demand this year, and “I’m not worried” about the oil market, BP’s Dudley said in an interview.

Oil Market News

Oil output from Colorado to Oklahoma has surged to records amid a recovery in crude prices from the crash that began in 2014, but the Eagle Ford shale field in Texas has fallen behind the pack.

In their quest to make one of the most expensive methods of producing crude more profitable, Canada’s oil-sands companies have been ramping up efforts to get their bitumen to flow through pipelines more easily and cheaply.

China’s Cnooc plans to shell out the most money in five years to boost oil and gas supply, helping to fulfill President Xi Jinping’s aim for the top energy user to become more self-sufficient.

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