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Crude Advances For Fourth Week as Supply Jitters Stoke Concern

Oil is near the highest level in four years as Iranian shipments drop, production in Venezuela falls due to an economic crisis. 

Crude Advances For Fourth Week as Supply Jitters Stoke Concern
A worker collects a sample of crude oil for quality control purposes. (Photographer: Oliver Bunic/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Oil rose for a fourth straight week amid concern that Saudi Arabia and Russia may not pump enough crude to prevent a supply crunch as Iranian cargoes disappear from world markets.

Futures were little changed in New York on Friday, ending the week 1.5 percent higher. Prices may hit $100 a barrel this autumn as U.S. pressure stymies exports from Iran, OPEC’s No. 3 producer, according to Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak. Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said the kingdom is boosting production and will supply needy refiners.

“We’re just seeing a lot of fear about future supply,” said Ashley Petersen, senior oil market analyst at Stratas Advisors LLC.

Crude Advances For Fourth Week as Supply Jitters Stoke Concern

Saudi Arabia is juggling intense pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to boost output and ease high prices. The kingdom has lifted production almost to a record and may raise it again next month, although doing so will infringe on available spare capacity, limiting Saudi Arabia’s ability to react to other supply shocks.

“The Saudis won’t flood the market and they don’t want to see it oversupplied,” said Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS Group AG. “Their demand is picking up because Iran volumes are falling. But the price for the Saudi strategy to cover those supply losses is extreme low spare capacity, and that worries the market.”

West Texas Intermediate for November delivery settled at $74.34 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The string of weekly increases was the longest since January.

Brent for December settlement declined 42 cents to settle at $84.16 on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The global benchmark crude traded at a $9.90 premium to WTI for the same month.

Russia’s Novak was not alone in predicting a return to three-digit price levels last seen in 2014. As Iran’s customers cut purchases and Venezuela’s industry struggled, trading giant Mercuria Energy Group Ltd. said last month Brent may spike over $100 in the fourth quarter and Trafigura Group expects it in early 2019. While Goldman Sachs Group Inc. isn’t that bullish, the Wall Street bank sees a risk of oil holding above $80 toward the end of the year.

Other oil-market news
  • Gasoline futures fell 0.7 percent to close at $2.0861 on Friday. 
  • Saudi Arabia’s crown prince insisted the stalled plan to sell shares in oil giant Aramco will go ahead, promising an initial public offering by 2021 and sticking to his ambitious view the state-run company is worth $2 trillion or more.

--With assistance from Rakteem Katakey and Tsuyoshi Inajima.

To contact the reporter on this story: Samuel Robinson in New York at srobinson145@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, Joe Carroll, Christine Buurma

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.