Oil hits highest since mid-2015 as global producers agree to cut

Oil rose by as much as 6.5 percent on Monday to an 18-month high after OPEC and some of its rivals reached their first deal since 2001 to jointly reduce output to try to tackle global oversupply.

>>Reuters
Published : 12 Dec 2016, 06:46 PM
Updated : 12 Dec 2016, 07:10 PM

On Saturday, producers from outside the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), led by Russia, agreed to reduce output by 558,000 barrels per day (bpd), short of the target of 600,000 bpd but still the largest contribution by non-OPEC ever.

That followed the Nov 30 deal by OPEC to cut output by 1.2 million bpd for six months from Jan 1, with top exporter Saudi Arabia cutting around 486,000 bpd to curb the supply glut that has dogged markets for two years.

Crude futures have rallied sharply, with US futures gaining 23 percent since the middle of November as optimism that an agreement would be reached started to grow.

"Right now the market is kind of feeding on itself," said Gene McGillian, manager of market research at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut.

"The market could push another $1 to $2 up to $55, and Brent could go to about $60, but at that point there are some concerns that are going to start to cap the rally."

Brent crude futures LCOc1 were up $1.94 at $56.27 per barrel, a 3.5 percent rise, after hitting a session peak of $57.89, the highest since July 2015.

For the deal to be effective, all parties must stick to their word. Higher prices also raise the chances of other producers boosting output, particularly US shale operators, where rig counts have grown steadily in recent months.

US production remains about one million bpd below its peak of 9.6 million reached in 2015, according to US Energy Department data.

PVM Oil Associates strategist David Hufton noted that "as things stand today, no cuts have been made and production is in fact still rising." He said it was difficult to "justify the front-end price surge other than that is where the liquidity is and where speculative players, moving in herds, always prefer to place their bets."