Oil rises, U.S. crude trading near two-month high after OPEC cut

Published 06/12/2019, 02:20
Updated 06/12/2019, 02:27
© Reuters.
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TOKYO, Dec 6 (Reuters) - Oil edged up in early Asia trade on

Friday, with U.S. crude trading near a two-month high after OPEC

agreed to increase output curbs by nearly 50 percent in early

2020, although the cartel stopped short of promising any further

steps after March.

West Texas Intermediate oil futures CLc1 were up by 2

cents at $58.45 a barrel by 0101 GMT. They rose to as high as

$59.12 a barrel on Thursday, the highest since the end of

September.

Brent futures LCOc1 were up 1 cent at $63.40. They fell

0.6% on Thursday.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)

and allies including Russia - a grouping known as OPEC+ - have

agreed to more output cuts to avert oversupply early next year

as economic growth stagnates amid the U.S.-China trade war.

The agreement, which needs to be formally adopted later on

Friday, will reduce 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) of production,

through tighter compliance and some adjustments. The group has

been withholding 1.2 million bpd and the new amount represents

about 1.7% of global oil output. The "decision seems to be more of a housekeeping move that

will narrow the gap between their current target and the

over-compliance we have seen from the alliance," said Edward

senior market analyst at OANDA.

A panel of ministers representing OPEC and non-OPEC

producers led by Russia recommended the cuts be made, according

to Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak on Thursday.

Details need to be hammered out at an OPEC+ meeting that

starts later on Friday in Vienna.

Higher oil prices are also supporting the initial public

offering of Saudia Arabia's state-owned oil company, Saudi

Aramco, which said on Thursday it priced the shares on sale at

the top of an indicated range. The sale was the world's biggest IPO, beating Alibaba Group

Holdings' $25 billion listing in 2014, but fell short of valuing

Aramco at $2 trillion, a target sought by Saudi Crown Prince

Mohammed bin Salman.

Foreign investors stayed away and the sale was restricted to

Saudi individuals and regional investors.

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