Oil hits 13-month highs as market re-balances

Russian deputy PM says market is recovering and price could average $45-60 per barrel this year


Reuters February 15, 2021

LONDON:

Oil prices soared on Monday to their highest in about 13 months as vaccine rollouts promised to revive demand and producers kept supply reined in.

Brent crude was up $0.92, or 1.5%, at $63.35 a barrel at 1215 GMT, after climbing to a session high of $63.76, the highest since January 22, 2020.

US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures gained $1.20, or 2%, to $60.67 a barrel. It touched $60.95 – its highest since January 8 last year, earlier in the session.

Oil prices gained around 5% last week. Prices have rallied in recent weeks as supplies tighten, due largely to production cuts from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allied producers in the group OPEC+.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said the global oil market is on a recovery path and the oil price this year could average $45-60 per barrel.

“We’ve seen low volatility in the past few months. This means the market is balanced and the prices we are seeing today are in line with the market situation,” Novak was quoted as saying.

Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden pushed for the first major legislative achievement of his term on Friday, turning to a bipartisan group of local officials for help on his $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief plan.

“The long-awaited $1.9 trillion package has not been passed. As the latest US job data hints at struggling labour market, the relief package cannot come soon enough for some,” said Tamas Varga, oil analyst at London brokerage PVM Oil Associates. “The stimulus will likely be approved in some shape or form,” he added.

In a move which could further tighten supply, workers will decide on Monday whether to strike this week at Norway’s largest oil loading terminal, action that could disrupt production at fields responsible for a third of the country’s crude output. 

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