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View Full Version : Saudi oil minister says mkt oversupplied, cuts output



osoab
17th April 2011, 02:57 PM
Saudi oil minister says mkt oversupplied, cuts output (http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/04/17/idINIndia-56391220110417)


(Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's oil minister said on Sunday the market was oversupplied and the kingdom had reduced output, sending a the strongest signal yet that OPEC may not boost output in June to quell soaring oil prices.

Consumers have urged the exporters' group to add supply to halt the rally in oil prices that has taken crude to its highest level in 2 1/2 years amid unrest in North Africa and the Middle East, but OPEC members say there is little they can do to bring prices down.

"The market is overbalanced ... Our production in February was 9.125 million barrels per day (bpd), in March it was 8.292 million bpd. In April we don't know yet, probably a little higher than March. The reason I gave you these numbers is to show you that the market is oversupplied," Naimi told reporters.

Two Saudi-based industry sources told Reuters last week the kingdom had cut production.

Naimi's words, echoed later on Sunday by his counterpart from the United Arab Emirates, are the clearest indications yet that the group is unconvinced there is a need for more oil despite the civil war that has slashed Libyan output and expectations Japanese oil demand will rise as it scrambles to rebuild its earthquake-shattered electricity grid.

"These statements underscore the breadth of the security premium currently in (oil) prices. Overall supplies are sufficient," said John Kilduff of energy hedge fund Again Capital. "As we've seen in the past, however, a well-supplied market is not always a barrier to very high prices."

NO COMMENT ON PRICE FROM NAIMI

Naimi declined to comment on the current price of crude.

Oil prices fell early last week after Goldman Sachs warned high prices may be eroding demand, but rebounded on signs of renewed health in the U.S. economy on Friday.

Nobuo Tanaka, the head of the International Energy Agency, which represents oil importers' interests that warned last week high prices were cutting into oil demand, stopped short of saying OPEC needed to boost output, but suggested the group be more flexible in its thinking about supply.

"The market is getting tighter and if it is tighter the price may go up, which may have a negative impact to economic growth," Tanaka told reporters.

Unrest in North Africa and the Middle East has left Saudi Arabia and other Gulf nations nervous of political unrest. The kingdom has promised nearly $93 billion in handouts to its citizens to keep them happy, making a sharp fall in oil prices a major risk for its budget.

Saudi Arabia and some other OPEC members unilaterally boosted oil production after the March uprising against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi shut down the bulk of the North African OPEC member's oil industry but weak demand for the additional production appears to have prompted the reduction in output.

Naimi said Saudi Arabia had sold 2 million barrels of a special blend of crude that tried to replicate the high quality Libyan barrels lost. Demand for the blend has been tepid, according to oil traders.

(Additional reporting and writing by Robert Campbell; Editing by Mike Nesbit and Maureen Bavdek)


http://www.finviz.com/fut_chart.ashx?t=CL&cot=067651&p=d1

Cobalt
17th April 2011, 03:10 PM
Supply and demand have little to do with the prices now a days, it is controlled by the speculators who drive the prices up and up so they can make more money.

The speculators are far more dangerous to this country then the non existent boogey man who is supposedly hiding in a cave somewhere

Horn
17th April 2011, 04:14 PM
Looks like the bottom has been set here.

Ash_Williams
17th April 2011, 04:18 PM
Another possibility is that the Saudi oil supply has cut its self and they aren't ready to reveal that.

Plastic
17th April 2011, 04:34 PM
Or perhaps they desire democracy be delivered to their shores.

It can be sent O.O.D. (oil on delivery).....

Olmstein
17th April 2011, 04:42 PM
Those stupid fucking camel fuckers. I spent $70 on gas just last night. Gas is about as high as I've ever seen it. I wouldn't say the market is oversupplied.

mightymanx
17th April 2011, 08:39 PM
Those stupid fucking camel fuckers. I spent $70 on gas just last night. Gas is about as high as I've ever seen it. I wouldn't say the market is oversupplied.


Hell..... I wish I only spent 70 on fuel. Diesel is 4.57/gallon here 70 is about a 1/2 tank.

keehah
18th April 2011, 09:51 AM
I could not fill up my mini van (Astro) last week. The credit card pre-authorization limit at the pumps is only $100. :-\

Cobalt
18th April 2011, 09:57 AM
I could not fill up my mini van (Astro) last week. The credit card pre-authorization limit at the pumps is only $100. :-\


You can run the card a 2nd time, I did it all the time filling up the work truck.

Horn
18th April 2011, 02:15 PM
Those stupid fucking camel fuckers. I spent $70 on gas just last night. Gas is about as high as I've ever seen it. I wouldn't say the market is oversupplied.


We oughtta get Carl over there to explain away this slow economic inflation to them. 8)

Olmstein
18th April 2011, 04:08 PM
Those stupid fucking camel fuckers. I spent $70 on gas just last night. Gas is about as high as I've ever seen it. I wouldn't say the market is oversupplied.


We oughtta get Carl over there to explain away this slow economic inflation to them. 8)


LOL!

Ponce
18th April 2011, 04:50 PM
Yea, went to town today and wasted 1 1/2 gallons of gas........oh well, 1.5 gallons every two weeks is not to bad...........heyyyyyyyyyyy I am retired but I do have to eat heheheheheheeheh...........and when summer gets here I'll us one of my scooters, that's why I got them 65 miles per gallons aint to bad, I know, I know you guys hate me hahahahaahahahah.

"Is not what life gives you, is what you grab from life".

Horn
19th April 2011, 06:36 AM
Tug-O-War, guess they'll decrease another million bpd.

Oil Futures Posted Decline over Potential Low Demand Concerns


Crude oil prices declined on Monday because investors were feared about the potential oil demand sunk following a cut on the US long term debt by the Standard & Poor’s to negative from stable and triggered a heavy stocks sell-off as well as the commodities.

Standard & Poor’s defended its act and stated that it had been more than two years since the crisis but US policy makers yet not agreed on how to counter current fiscal weakening situation.

http://www.usamarketnews.com/commodities-news/1689/oil-futures-posted-decline-over-potential-low-demand-concerns.html