Oil prices hit 15-month lows on Monday in response to the
banking crisis that followed the collapse of two US lenders and resulted in
Credit Suisse being rescued by Switzerland's biggest bank UBS.
Brent crude was trading around US$75 a barrel on Wednesday
morning.
Last October OPEC Plus, which comprises the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies led by Russia, agreed steep
output cuts of 2 million bpd from November until the end of 2023 despite major
consumers calling for increases to production.
That decision helped to push Brent close to $100 a barrel,
but prices have come under pressure since then as rising interest rates to
combat high inflation threaten to stymie oil demand growth.
Falling
oil prices are a problem for most of the group's members because their
economies rely heavily on oil revenue.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak on Tuesday
said that Moscow will continue with a 500,000 bpd production cut it announced
last month, lasting until the end of June.
"This is only a unilateral cut of Russia," one of
the delegates said.
"No changes for the group until the end of year,"
he added.
Another
delegate added that no further cuts were planned by the group.
A third delegate said the recent slump in oil prices was
related to speculation in the financial market, not market fundamentals.
The heads of top oil traders and hedge funds that spoke at
an industry event this week said that they expected oil prices to
strengthen by the end of the year as continued easing of COVID-19 restrictions
in China drive up demand in the world's biggest oil importer.
Pierre Andurand, founder of hedge fund Andurand Capital, was
the most bullish and forecast a potential Brent oil price of US$140 a barrel by
the end of the year.
In its most recent monthly report, OPEC upgraded its
forecast for Chinese oil demand growth this year but maintained its projection
for global demand growth at 2.32 million bpd.
OPEC Plus is due to hold a virtual meeting of its
ministerial committee, which includes Russia and Saudi Arabia, on April 3
before a full ministerial meeting in Vienna on June 04, 2023.
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