U.S. West Texas Intermediate
(WTI) crude futures were at $58.50 a barrel at 0141 GMT, up 3 cents from their
last settlement.
Brent crude futures, the
international benchmark for oil prices, were at $65.25 a barrel, unchanged from
their last close, but near the $65.83 per barrel briefly on Dec. 12 - the
highest since June 2015.
Brent has risen by 47 percent
since mid-2017. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC),
the Middle East-dominated producer club, and Russia - the world's single
biggest oil producer - have been withholding output in order to tighten the market
and prop up prices.
The agreement to cut started last
January and is set to cover all of 2018.
Jabar al-Luaibi, oil minister of
OPEC-member Iraq, said on Monday there would be a balance between supply and
demand by the first quarter of 2018, leading to a boost in oil prices.
"During the first quarter of
next year there will be more balance between supply and demand, which will
reflect positively on improving global oil prices," he said.
The production cuts come amid
healthy global demand, which many analysts expect to hit 100 million barrels
per day (bpd) for the first time at some point next year or in 2019.
Keeping a lid on prices for the
moment is the expected return of the Forties pipeline system in the North Sea,
which can supply up to 450,000 bpd of crude underpinning Brent futures.
The pipeline shut down earlier in
December due to a crack, but operator Ineos said the system was being tested
following repairs and full flows should return in early January.
In the longer term, efforts by
OPEC and Russia efforts to prop up prices could also be undermined by U.S.
production, which has soared by more than 16 percent since mid-2016, fast
approaching 10 million bpd.
Only OPEC king-pin Saudi Arabia
and Russia produce more, but the United States is fast catching up, largely
thanks to shale drillers.
The U.S. rig count, an early
indicator of future output, held at 747 in the week to Dec. 22, according to
the latest weekly report by Baker Hughes. That's still much higher than a year
ago, when only 523 rigs were active, and most analysts expect U.S. output to
rise past 10 million bpd within weeks.
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Source: Moneycontrol

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