Oil prices ease as focus shifts to producers’ meeting

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Oil prices jump to highest since 2008

SINGAPORE: Oil prices eased in Asian trade Friday on profit-taking following two days of solid gains as traders turned their attention to next week’s planned meeting of key producers.

Russia and members of the OPEC oil cartel led by Saudi Arabia will gather in Algeria for three days from Monday and are expected to discuss a stubborn supply glut that has depressed prices since 2014.

Traders are uncertain that a deal can be reached on freezing or cutting output, but reports that Saudi Arabia, Iran and Qatar met at the OPEC headquarters in Vienna has fuelled optimism.

An earlier Saudi-led attempt to freeze output fell apart in April after Iran refused to participate, saying it needed to raise production depleted by years of western economic sanctions lifted only in January.

At around 0320 GMT, the US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was down 50 cents at $45.82 and Brent dropped 37 cents to $47.28.

Both contracts booked solid gains over the previous two days — WTI surged 6.6 percent and Brent gained 3.9 percent — on data showing US commercial crude inventories fell more than six million barrels last week, indicating strong strong demand in the world’s top oil consumer.

“Anticipation of next week’s Algiers OPEC meeting has once again underpinned (oil prices) although the probability of an agreement is very low,” said Stephen Innes, senior trader at OANDA.

“But with the recent inventory data still fresh in traders’ memories, position squaring dominates the current landscape.”

Oil prices plunged from peaks of more than $100 a barrel in mid-2014 to near 13-year lows below $30 in February as supply outpaced demand.