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Listado de la etiqueta: OPEC

Iran, India Sign MoU to Develop Oil, Gas Projects

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OPEC member Iran and India – one of Asia’s fastest growing source of energy demand – signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to develop oil and gas projects, including the Farzad B gas field, Iranian Petroleum Minister Bijan Zangeneh told the Iran-India business conference held at Teheran Chamber of Commerce Saturday, Shana – a media linked to Iran’s Ministry of Petroleum – reported Sunday. «We had thorough conversations today and signed an MoU for development of Farzad B gas field, refinery cooperation, export of crude oil and petroleum products and mutual cooperation in petrochemical industry,» Zangeneh said.

The MoU was signed during a visit to Teheran by Indian Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, who, the Ministry said on its website April 7, hoped to engage «with the Iranian political leadership to work with them, particularly in the hydrocarbon, petrochemicals and fertilizers sectors for mutual benefits, including strengthening of India’s energy security.» According to Zangeneh, Indian investors should consider the development of the Farzad B project as a top priority, adding that «we hope decisions regarding the project’s development will be made before 2017.»

He said the Farzad B gas field can produce 3 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of natural gas, but Iran has signed an MoU with Indian developers for the production of 1 Bcf/d of natural gas from the field. A consortium comprising three Indian companies, including ONGC Videsh Ltd. and Oil India Ltd., made a gas discovery at the offshore Farzad B field in 2008.

Meanwhile, Zangeneh said both nations have agreed to set up major joint ventures and enhance their strategic relations, adding that «we hope Iranian and Indian companies reach out to each other and, under the new circumstances, the two countries boost their investments.» Indian companies have indicated to Zangeneh their interests to purchase natural gas from Iran to feed their petrochemical and other energy-consuming industries, Shana reported. On its part, Iran could deliver gas to Indian customers in Chabahar or any other ports where the Indians are willing to invest to feed methanol, steel and aluminium plants.

Separately, shareholders of Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) Pipeline Company Limited signed an agreement in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan Thursday to invest $200 million in the TAPI natural gas pipeline. According to the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the investment includes funds for detailed engineering and route surveys, environmental and social safeguard studies, and procurement and financing activities, to enable a final investment decision, after which construction can begin. Construction is estimated to take up to 3 years.

According to Pakistan’s Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Resources Jam Kamal Khan, TAPI would supply 487.3 billion cubic feet (Bcf) or 13.8 billion cubic meters (Bcm) of gas from Turkmenistan to meet the South Asian country’s growing energy demand, Indian daily The Economic Times reported Friday. Sean O’ Sullivan, ADB’s Director General of Central and West Asia Department, said the gas pipeline will unlock economic opportunities and diversify the energy market for Turkmenistan and enhance energy security for the region.

Ground breaking of the 1,127 mile (1,814 kilometer) -long TAPI pipeline, a project seeking to ease energy shortages in South Asia, was carried out in December 2015 year in Turkmenistan. The pipeline will be equipped to transport 3.2 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) or 90 million standard cubic meters a day (MMscm/d) gas for 30 years, with India and Pakistan originally expected to receive 1.3 Bscf/d (38 MMscm/d) each, while the remaining 494.4 million standard cubic feet per day (MMscf/d) or 14 MMscm/d was to be supplied to Afghanistan.

So far, Turkmenistan is the only country that has started work to build its section of the TAPI pipeline. The pipeline will travel 480 miles (773 kilometers) through Afghanistan and 514 miles (827 kilometers) in Pakistan before ending at Fazilka in Punjab, India, The Economic Times said.

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Oil Ends Steady Near $50; Best Monthly Gain in Brent in 7 years

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Oil prices ended steady on Friday after hitting 2016 highs but finished April trading about 20 percent higher, with Brent crude having its best monthly gain in seven years. A weaker dollar and optimism that a global oil glut will ease have lifted crude futures by more than $20 a barrel since they plumbed 12-year lows below $30 in the first quarter. Brent futures settled just a penny lower at $48.13 a barrel, after reaching a 2016 peak at $48.50. It rose 21.5 percent in April, its largest monthly advance since May 2009. U.S. crude futures closed 11 cents lower at $45.92 a barrel, after hitting a year-to-date high at $46.78. It gained 20 percent in April, the biggest monthly gain in a year.

With prices less than $5 away from $50 a barrel, investment bank Jefferies said the market «is coming into better balance» and would flip into undersupply in the second half of the year. But others warned that the rally was driven by investors holding large speculative positions, while oil stockpiles were still high, with a Reuters survey showing OPEC output in April rising to its most in recent history. «The issue is that we haven’t seen price rallies … correlate with fundamentals,» said Hamza Khan, senior commodity strategist at ING. «The fundamentals – high stocks, high production – haven’t changed.» Technical analysts said crude could cruise to $50 a barrel but stiffer resistance before $55 could spark profit-taking on the market’s biggest rebound in two years. Analysts polled by Reuters raised their average forecast for Brent in 2016 to $42.30 per barrel, the second consecutive month of increases.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a note that «non-OPEC oil supply is indeed hanging off a cliff», and estimated that global output would contract year-on-year in April or May for the first time since 2013. The OPEC survey aside, Saudi oil output was expected to edge up by 350,000 barrels per day to around 10.5 million bpd, sources told Reuters, as tankers filled with unsold oil floated at sea seeking buyers. The discount in spot U.S. crude to the next trading month meanwhile whittled to its smallest since January, reducing the advantages of storing oil in the United States for later delivery. (Additional reporting by Libby George and Karolin Schaps in LONDON and Henning Gloystein in SINGAPORE; editing by David Gregorio and Marguerita Choy)

Copyright: Rig Zone
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Success through more efficient use of technology – DEA at EAGE 2016 in Vienna

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From 30 May to 02 June, DEA is presenting recent projects and technology highlights at Europe’s most important technology event of the oil and gas industry, the 78th EAGE Conference and Exhibition.

“In exploration and production of oil and gas, sustained quest for technical solutions and the constant search for efficiency-enhancing concepts are daily business”, says Manfred Böckmann, Senior Vice President Exploration DEA Deutsche Erdoel AG.

These measures are a prerequisite for a continuing assurance of our high safety and environmental standards on the one hand and the economic viability of the projects on the other. In times of low oil prices, this is becoming increasingly important and the EAGE offers an ideal platform for the essential exchange of ideas and the discussion of new approaches, together with the experts of other E&P companies, the service industry and the representatives of science”, Böckmann adds.

At DEA’s booth (Stand No. 2230, Hall B), the visitors can experience live presentations of case studies from international DEA projects and are invited to discuss current industry topics with the DEA experts during the coming days.

DEA Deutsche Erdoel AG is an international operator in the field of exploration and production of crude oil and natural gas based in Hamburg. Its focus is on safe, sustainable and environmental conscious exploitation of oil and gas. DEA has 117 years of experience working along the whole upstream value chain as operator or project partner. With a staff force of 1,400 employees DEA has shares in production facilities and concessions in, among others, Germany, Norway, Denmark, Egypt and Algeria. Moreover, in Germany, DEA also operates large subsurface storage facilities for natural gas.

Copyright: Your Oil and Gas News

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‘Well-Timed’ OPEC Talk Forces Oil Bears Into Record Reversal

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OPEC has done it again.

Talk of a potential deal to freeze output helped push oil close to $50 a barrel and prompted money managers to cut bets on falling prices by the most ever. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, went from a bear to a bull market in less than three weeks.

OPEC is on course to agree to a production freeze because its biggest members are pumping flat-out, said Chakib Khelil, the group’s former president. Saudi Energy Minister  Khalid Al-Falih said that the talks may lead to action to stabilize the market.

«This is all courtesy of some very well-timed comments from the Saudi oil minister,» said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLC, a New York hedge fund focused on energy. «They’ve been successful over the last year in jawboning the market, and this is the latest example.»

Hedge funds trimmed their short position in WTI by 56,907 futures and options during the week ended Aug. 16, the most in data going back to 2006, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Futures rose 8.9 percent to $46.58 a barrel in the report week and closed at $48.52 a barrel on Aug. 19. WTI is up more than 20 percent from its Aug. 2 low, meeting the common definition of a bull market.

«This was a very short market so we were bound to get some covering,» said Stephen Schork, president of the Schork Group Inc., a consulting company in Villanova, Pennsylvania. «You probably won’t hear a lot from OPEC with prices up here, but if we get down to where we were a few weeks ago we can expect to hear more.»

Informal Talks

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries plans to hold informal talks to discuss the market at the International Energy Forum next month in Algiers. Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said that the nation was open to discussing a freeze.

Talks to implement a production freeze collapsed in April when Saudi Arabia said it wouldn’t take part without Iranian participation. Iran was restoring exports after sanctions over its nuclear program were lifted in January.  

Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq and non-member Russia are producing at, or close to, maximum capacity, Khelil said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Aug. 17. Saudi Arabia told OPEC that its production rose to an all-time high of 10.67 million barrels a day in July, according to a report from the group.

Ample Stockpiles

Declining crude and gasoline stockpiles in the U.S. also bolstered the market last week. Crude supplies dropped by 2.51 million barrels as of Aug. 12, Energy Information Administration data show. Gasoline inventories slipped 2.72 million barrels during the period. Stockpiles of both crude and gasoline remain at the highest seasonal levels in decades even after the declines.

«There’s a high level of uncertainty right now, so fairly small news can move the market a lot,» said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts. «It still remains the case that we have a huge surplus of supply and aren’t going to see it disappear anytime soon.»

Money managers’ short position in WTI dropped to 163,232 futures and options. Longs, or bets on rising prices, increased 0.1 percent, while net longs advanced 56 percent, the most since July 2010.

In other markets, net-bearish bets on gasoline climbed 54 percent to 1,970 contracts. Gasoline futures rose 5.7 percent in the report week. Net-long wagers on U.S. ultra low sulfur diesel increased more than fivefold to 10,835 contracts. Futures advanced 9.8 percent. 

Copyright: Rig Zone

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Iran’s Oil Minister to Join OPEC Talks on Market in Algeria

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Iran’s Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh will join an informal meeting of OPEC members next month in Algiers, a state news service reported, ending uncertainty about whether OPEC’s third-biggest producer would participate.

Producers from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will meet on the sidelines of an energy policy group in the Algerian capital next month to consider conditions in the oil market, OPEC’s president, Qatar’s minister Mohammed Al Sada, said on Aug. 8. Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest exporter, is working “to restore balance between supply and demand to support oil prices,” and OPEC and non-members will discuss potential steps in Algiers to stabilize markets, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said on Aug. 13.

“I will participate in this meeting,” Iran’s Zanganeh was cited as saying by the oil ministry’s news service Shana. Zanganeh had not previously committed to attending the meeting, and he didn’t comment on the position Iran will take at the talks. Zanganeh also said he will meet with OPEC Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo “in the near future.”

Price Gains

Crude oil has gained about 11 percent since OPEC said it would meet informally to discuss prices and supply, on speculation that the group could agree to freeze output levels. Benchmark Brent crude was trading near $49 a barrel on Thursday in London.

A meeting of OPEC and other producing countries in April ended without agreement in Doha when Saudi Arabia demanded that Iran be part of the any deal to limit output. Iran had ruled out a ceiling on its production until it recovered the output levels it had before the U.S. and European Union tightened international sanctions on its oil industry in 2012.

Iran’s production has risen to 3.85 million barrels a day since sanctions were eased in January, Zanganeh said this month, still less than its target for the end of this year of 4 million barrels a day. OPEC as a whole has boosted output to record levels since adopting a Saudi-led decision in 2014 to protect the group’s global market share by forcing out higher-cost producers.

The International Energy Forum, comprising 73 countries that account for about 90 percent of the global supply and demand for oil and natural gas, will meet in Algiers on Sept. 26-28.

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Oil Bears Dominate Market as Doubt Grows Over Output Limits

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The longer OPEC and other producers talk about a ceiling on crude output, the more doubts grow in the market.  

Money managers increased wagers on falling prices by the most in three months as a meeting between Russia and Saudi Arabia ended without specific measures to support prices. Producers have pledged to discuss action in Algiers later this month.

“The more they talk, the less people listen,” said Michael D. Cohen, an analyst at Barclays Plc in New York. “If you look at the actual statements from the Saudis, there’s not a lot of enthusiasm. They’re saying that either they don’t believe a substantial intervention is needed right now or that if other producers want a freeze, they’ll go along.”

Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said on Sept. 5 that he’s optimistic producers will agree to cooperate in Algiers. He spoke after meeting with his Russian counterpart, Alexander Novak, at the G-20 summit in China. Novak said that a freeze in production by OPEC and Russia would be the most effective way of stabilizing the market.

The International Energy Forum, including 73 countries that account for about 90 percent of the global supply and demand for oil and natural gas, will meet in the Algerian capital Sept. 26-28. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will hold informal talks on the sidelines of the gathering.

Parsing Words

“Everyone is sifting for clues on whether OPEC will reach an agreement to limit production or leave it uncapped with the potential for higher output,” said Tim Evans, an energy analyst at Citi Futures Perspective in New York. “At this point we’re waiting for the outcome of the talks. A lot of people are standing to the side while others are building positions with a specific view in mind.”

A freeze deal between OPEC members and other producers was proposed in February. A meeting in April ended with no accord because Iran refused to join, while Saudi Arabia insisted that its rival take part. Iran has said it’s too soon to cap output as it’s still restoring production curbed by sanctions.

Speculators bolstered their short position in West Texas Intermediate crude by 34,954 futures and options during the week ended Sept. 6, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Bets on rising prices declined.

Prices Drop

WTI futures dropped 3.3 percent to $44.83 a barrel in the report week and prices lost 1.6 percent to $45.15 at 9:18 a.m. New York time.

Futures surged Sept. 8 after the Energy Information Administration reported U.S. crude inventories fell 14.5 million barrels in the week ended Sept. 2, the biggest drop since January 1999. Prices retreated the next day as speculation grew the supply drop was a one-off caused by a tropical storm that disrupted imports and offshore production.

Money managers’ short position in WTI climbed to 130,274 futures and options. Longs fell 1.9 percent. The resulting net-long position dropped 19 percent. Net-long positions in Brent crude decreased by 37,226 contracts, according to ICE Futures Europe.

In other markets, net-bullish bets on gasoline declined 32 percent to 11,148 contracts. Gasoline futures dropped 9.1 percent in the report week. Net-long wagers on U.S. ultra low sulfur diesel tumbled 56 percent to 9,840 contracts. Futures declined 4.3 percent. 

Gambling Momentum

“There’s a lot of gambling taking place,” said Stephen Schork, president of the Schork Group Inc., a consulting company in Villanova, Pennsylvania. “A lot of money managers are betting that a bottom has been put in but I’m skeptical.” 

U.S. crude stockpiles remain at their highest seasonal level in more than 20 years. Refineries plan maintenance programs for September and October when fuel demand is lower. Over the past five years, refiners’ thirst for oil has dropped an average of 1.2 million barrels a day from July to October.

“The market will probably yo-yo in a range through the maintenance season but there’s downside risk,” Schork said. “If demand isn’t a strong as hoped and crude inventories rise, the market could take another leg lower.”

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Copyright: Bloomberg

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What Does OPEC’s Freeze Talk Really Mean?

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Heading into the home stretch before a highly anticipated OPEC meeting in Algiers next week, crude industry experts and non-OPEC members alike are opining on what may happen to crude production.

Dave Pursell, managing director and head of macro research at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. in Houston, told Rigzone the production freeze idea is based largely on optics.

“But, they’re raising expectations that there will be an agreement,” he said. “I think they need to do something, and the challenges are less now than they were earlier this year.”

Oil prices have tumbled from more than $100 per barrel in 2014, as prodigious supply outsized demand. More recently, crude prices have hovered in the low $40s.

As Pursell explained, OPEC members Iraq and Libya can’t produce more oil, anyway, at least in the near term. Iraq needs significant capital investment to move forward, and Libyan production is struggling under the weight of political unrest.

“The reality is the only reason you can get a freeze is because people can’t grow. The only spare capacity in the world sits inside of Saudi Arabia and Libya. That doesn’t mean Iran and Iraq can’t grow over time, and the rest of OPEC can’t grow a little bit over time, but it takes a ton of capital,” he said. “There’s no spare capacity that could easily be brought on.”

Still, Pursell said that even if a production freeze agreement is mostly for show, it’s not meaningless.

“But it’s important ‘show’ in that shows they can agree to something. There’s this notion that OPEC is irrelevant and my argument is that if OPEC is irrelevant, how come I’m talking about them every day? And so if they’re going to eventually have to cut – which we don’t think they will – but if they do, you first have to have an agreement to not increase,” he said. “You have to agree on something, and then if you have to make a harder choice down the road that you have to cut, there’s more confidence that it could actually be implemented.”

Many analysts, including Pursell, have said a cut is unlikely, though. Russia recently said it’s off the table. The nation’s energy minister told UPI there are no proposals to slash crude production. Alexander Novak said one option under review would be to maintain production rates at current levels for the up to six months.

According to a new Reuters’ story anonymous sources have said Saudi Arabia would be willing to cut its crude production if Iran will cap its oil output. Iran has steadfastly said it won’t consider a freeze until it has ramped production back up to pre-sanction levels, but that may soon happen.

Copyright: Rig Zone

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Petróleo en EU alcanza los 47 dólares, su nivel más alto en 20 días

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Los futuros del petróleo repuntaron a su nivel más alto desde principios de septiembre, tras publicarse que los países de la OPEP llegaron a un acuerdo para limitar la producción, sumado a la caída semanal en los inventarios de crudo en Estados Unidos.

El crudo estadounidense WTI para entrega en noviembre, se disparó 5.33 por ciento y cerró en 47.05 dólares el barril, su nivel más alto desde el pasado 8 de septiembre.

El Intercontinental Petroleum Exchange (ICE), el crudo Brent para entrega en diciembre cerró en 48.69 dólares, un 5.92 por ciento más que al término de la sesión anterior de 45.97 dólares.

Los países de la OPEP acordaron en Argelia congelar la producción para reducirla a 32.5 millones de barriles diarios a lo largo de 2017.

El acuerdo fue adoptado este miércoles en una reunión informal de la Organización de Países Exportadores de Petróleo y deberá ser refrendado en Viena, en un encuentro formal de la organización el próximo 30 de noviembre.

Antes del anuncio procedente de Argel, los operadores del Nymex también celebraron el informe del Departamento de Energía, que reveló que las reservas de crudo en Estados Unidos cayeron la semana pasada en 1.9 millones de barriles hasta 502.7 millones.

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Fuente: El Financiero

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Brent Oil Halts Gain near $50 as Market Eyes November OPEC Deal

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Oil halted gains after rising above $50 a barrel in London for the first time in more than three weeks, as plans by some OPEC members to boost output raised doubts the group will be able to implement its production cut in November.

Brent futures fell 0.4 percent in London after advancing 6.9 percent last week. While OPEC outlined an accord to reduce production by as much as 750,000 barrels a day, its third-largest member Iran wants to increase exports to 2.35 million barrels a day in the coming months, state news agency IRNA reported. The OPEC member is currently shipping 2.2 million barrels a day. Rigs targeting crude in the U.S. rose a fifth consecutive week to the highest level since February, Baker Hughes Inc. said on its website Friday.

Oil capped the biggest monthly gain since April after the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed to trim supply for the first time in eight years. While quotas will be decided at the group’s official meeting in November, Nigeria and Iran have said they are exempt and Iraq has said it doesn’t accept OPEC’s estimates of its production levels. Russia boosted output last month to a post-Soviet record.

“Oil will probably trade between $45 and $50 a barrel as we move into November and see what type of deal is done,” said Angus Nicholson, a market analyst in Melbourne at IG Ltd. “There are questions about how OPEC is going to police the new output limits and how they will keep members in line if they breach their production ceiling.”

Brent for December settlement, which became the front-month contract Monday following the expiry of November futures last week, was 5 cents lower at $50.14 a barrel at 8:17 a.m. on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The November contract fell 18 cents to expire at $49.06 on Friday, while the December contract closed at $50.19. The global benchmark traded at a $1.47 premium to December West Texas Intermediate.

WTI for November delivery was down 17 cents at $48.07 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 41 cents to $48.24 on Friday, the highest close since Aug. 19. Total volume traded was about 42 percent below the 100-day average. Prices rose 7.9 percent in September.

For a story on OPEC challenges after the output agreement, click here.

U.S. drillers added seven rigs during the week ended Sept. 30, increasing the count to 425, according to Baker Hughes. The U.S. is pumping at a rate of 8.5 million barrels a day, weekly data from the Energy Information Administration show.

 

Oil-market news:

Russian output climbed to 11.11 million barrels a day in September, according to data from the Energy Ministry’s CDU-TEK unit. Investors increased their long position in WTI by 24,131 futures and options, or 8.1 percent, during the week ended Sept. 27, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Bets on falling prices dropped.

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Oil Speculators Most Bullish Since ’14 After Wild Two Months

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Oil investors must be getting dizzy.

In the two months since OPEC began talking about capping production, speculators’ sentiment has swung wildly, with government and exchange data showing the four biggest weekly position changes ever for the two global benchmark crudes. The latest shift is to optimism, with money managers the most bullish on West Texas Intermediate oil in two years.

«Since the summer we’ve had big moves in net length,» said Mike Wittner, head of oil-market research at Societe Generale SA in New York. «It usually has trended up or down over a couple of months. Now this is happening in a matter of weeks. We’re seeing huge shifts.»

Money managers reduced bets on lower WTI prices by more than half in the past three weeks as OPEC agreed to its first deal to cut output in eight years. That drove net length to the highest since July 2014 in the week ended Oct. 11, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. Brent longs also rose, leaving the combined length of the two benchmark contracts at the highest in at least five years.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed on Sept. 28 in Algiers to trim output to a range of 32.5 million to 33 million barrels a day, which is due to be finalized at the Vienna summit next month. OPEC took a step toward coordinated supply curbs with Russia last week and will meet for a “technical exchange” to set a road map for output levels later this month.

The swings in sentiment have tracked the rocky road to $50 a barrel oil. Speculators’ combined WTI and Brent crude net position rose or fell more than 100,000 contracts four times in the past two months, the only moves of that size in CFTC and ICE Futures Europe data going back to 2011.

Prices began to rise after OPEC’s president said Aug. 8 that the group would hold informal talks in Algiers and Saudi Arabia signaled Aug. 11 it was prepared to discuss taking action to stabilize markets. Futures gave up most of those gains amid doubts that Saudi Arabia and Iran to reach an deal, before the agreement in Algiers sparked the latest rally.

«The change in tone from the Saudis is important,» said Kurt Billick, the founder and chief investment officer of Bocage Capital LLC in San Francisco, which manages about $432 million in commodities equities and futures. «Getting to a yes in Vienna is challenging. That they are willing to talk about a deal is a big change.»

Money managers’ short position in West Texas Intermediate crude, or bets on falling prices, shrank by 28 percent to 71,407 futures and options. Longs rose 1.8 percent to the highest since June 2014. The resulting net-long position increased 13 percent.

WTI increased 4.3 percent to $50.79 a barrel in the report week. Prices on Monday were down 0.6 percent at $50.04 a barrel as of 9:13 a.m.

Other Markets

In the Brent market, money managers boosted net longs by 11 percent to 396,694 during the week, according to data from ICE Futures Europe. It was the most bullish total since April.

In fuel markets, net-bullish bets on gasoline rose 19 percent to 36,650 contracts, the highest since March 2015, as futures slipped 1.1 percent in the report week. Wagers on higher ultra low sulfur diesel prices climbed 46 percent to 9,074. Futures rose 2.1 percent.

The scale of the internal differences OPEC must resolve before securing a deal to cut supply was revealed Oct. 12 as the group’s latest output estimates showed a half-million-barrel difference of opinion over how much two key members are pumping.

“The bottom line is that they’ve made an agreement,» Wittner said. “If you are going short you are betting against the Saudis, which isn’t a good thing historically.»

17 Octubre_Oil Speculators

Copyright: Bloomberg

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