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Brent Jumps to Two-Year High as Turkey Threatens Kurdish Exports

Turkey says can halt Kurdish oil exports amid independence vote

Brent Jumps to Two-Year High as Turkey Threatens Kurdish Exports
An employee turns a control valve on pipework beside a storage tank at an oil delivery point. (Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Brent crude surged to its highest in more than two years as Turkey threatened to shut down Kurdish oil shipments through its territory.

Futures climbed as much as 3 percent in London, and the U.S. benchmark reached a four-month high. Turkey can choose to “close the valves” on oil exports from Kurdistan, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said as the Iraqi region holds an independence referendum. Meanwhile, OPEC and its partners implemented more than 100 percent of their agreed cuts last month, and the outlook for global demand has improved.

“It’s pretty clear the Kurds are going to vote for independence and we will have yet another geopolitical hot spot in the Middle East that threatens a significant amount of oil supply,” John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC, a New York-based hedge fund, said by telephone. At the same time, “the cooperation and the strong effort by OPEC is registering with the market.”

Brent Jumps to Two-Year High as Turkey Threatens Kurdish Exports

Crude prices have risen more than 9 percent this month in New York as U.S. refiners recovered from Hurricane Harvey and both OPEC and the International Energy Agency sweetened their worldwide demand forecasts. Concerns over excessive supplies from the U.S. are also easing. American explorers reduced the number of rigs searching for crude last week to the lowest level since June.

“The implication here is that with drilling activity in the United States moderating, it’s going to be very likely that we will not get the robust increases that many had expected from U.S. shale,” Bart Melek, head of global commodity strategy at TD Securities in Toronto, said by telephone. “Certainly, this whole idea that OPEC is communicating that we are rebalancing quicker than expected” has helped underpin the rally, he said.

Brent for November settlement advanced $1.64 to $58.50 a barrel at 1:14 p.m. in New York on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange after touching $58.58, the highest intraday price since July 2015. Total volume traded Monday was about 16 percent above the 100-day average. 

Buy Sign

The global benchmark’s 50-day moving average crossed above its 200-day moving average for the first time since 2016. The pattern, known as a golden cross, is typically a bullish indicator and may encourage buying.

West Texas Intermediate for November delivery added $1.14 to $51.80 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent traded at a premium of $6.70 to WTI.

The outlook for the global oil market is improving and members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will keep pressing onward until it balances, OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo said in a video message at a conference in Singapore on Monday. However, it’s not possible to say whether the deal will need to be extended until closer to its March expiration, Kuwait’s Oil Minister Issam Almarzooq said.

The Kurdistan Regional Government’s crude oil exports through Turkey’s Mediterranean port of Ceyhan would end if Turkey chose to shut them down, Erdogan said in Istanbul. The Iraq parliament voted to close its border crossings with Kurdistan, return oil fields in north of Kirkuk and other disputed areas to the control and supervision of the federal government, the legislature said on its website.

Oil-market news:

  • North Korean’s Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho said President Donald Trump’s recent comments amount to a declaration of war. Ri, speaking in New York Monday, said North Korea has the right to shoot down U.S. warplanes as part of its right to self-defense under the United Nations charter.
  • Iraq’s goal to boost production capacity to 5 million barrels a day won’t affect markets and not all new output will be exported, Oil Minister Jabbar Al-Luaibi said in Baghdad.
  • Compliance to agreed cuts is “acceptable,” but OPEC needs to address rising supply from Libya and Nigeria, which are exempt from the curbs, Iran’s Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said in Tehran.

--With assistance from Ben Sharples and Rakteem Katakey

To contact the reporter on this story: Jessica Summers in New York at jsummers24@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Carlos Caminada at ccaminada1@bloomberg.net, Jim Efstathiou Jr.