Brent
crude oil steadied below $73 a barrel yesterday, although Russian and Nigerian
currencies remained under pressure on persistent doubts over their central
banks’ ability to provide support.
With
Brent crude trading at about $72, breaking a five-day losing streak, the rouble
staged a brief rally but headed lower again, losing 1.4 percent against the
dollar.
naira-Dollar
Unease
is growing about the Russian central bank’s absence from
currency markets
despite heavy rouble losses, amounting to almost 6 percent at one point on
Monday.
The
bank last month floated the rouble which has been battered for months by
falling oil and the impact of Western sanctions over the Ukraine crisis.
holding onto a rally from five-year lows after oil producers failed to curb
production despite a supply glut.
“The
market is trying to find some equilibrium,” said Olivier Jakob, oil analyst at
Petromatrix in Zug, Switzerland. There was a sharp drop last week and a rebound
yesterday.
Brent
is trying to find out if it is going to be trading at the $60 to $70 range or
$70 to $80.” Brent was unchanged at $72.54, after jumping 3.4 per cent on
Monday. U.S. crude was down 40 cents at $68.60 a barrel.
Oil
has fallen by more than a third since June and on Monday reached it lowest
since October 2009 as huge new supplies of high quality, light oil from North
America overwhelmed demand. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries had been expected at a meeting last week to trim output to try to
rebalance the market, but could only agree to maintain existing production
targets.
Analysts
said the market was going through a volatile adjustment phase that would lead
to more erratic price movements before a more stable pricing environment was
found.
“Saudi
Arabia and OPEC no longer have the mechanism to balance markets from the supply
side,” said Mark Keenan, head of commodities research Asia at Societe Generale.
The
bank cut its U.S. crude and Brent forecasts to an average of $65 and $70,
respectively, for 2015 and 2016.
Both
Brent and U.S. crude touched five-year lows on Monday, with Brent dipping to
$67.53 a barrel and WTI touching $63.72, before recovering to settle up on the
day.
“Yesterday,
much of the move higher right across the entire commodity complex … suggests
that there was a strong element of people increasing their allocation to
commodities, taking advantage of these low prices,” Keenan said.
Analysts
say much lower oil prices may force some producers out of the market.
As
crude prices tumble, offshore drillers are increasingly considering “warm
stacking” their rigs to take them temporarily off the market, and they also
threaten unconventional producers that have recently come to the market when
prices were still higher.
New
data suggests that a much-anticipated slowdown in the U.S. shale rig count has
started arriving.
A
double-digit percentage fall in oil prices last week sent a shockwave through
global financial markets, with countries heavily dependent on oil prices such
as Russia, Nigeria and Norway among the biggest sufferers. That had all eased
on Tuesday, with the Russian rouble, Malaysian ringgit and many other emerging
market currencies stabilizing against the dollar after gains overnight.
Brent
crude prices were roughly steady and Europe’s main stock markets were around 1
percentage point higher, driven by gains for oil majors including BP, Total and
Royal Dutch Shell.
Vanguard
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