SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Crude oil
prices stabilized on Tuesday due to firm demand after dipping in early
trade on expectations that OPEC would not cut output at its meeting this
week.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) meets this Friday in Vienna to discuss its production strategy,
with U.S. bank Citi saying the group was likely to maintain current
production.
Prices were supported as Saudi oil minister Ali
al-Naimi said overnight that demand would pick up and tighten the market
in the second half of the year.
"Comments from Saudi Arabian oil minister Ali al-Naimi
were characteristically upbeat, acknowledging a current surplus in the
market, but anticipating stronger second half demand and an eventual
rebalancing of the market," Citi said in a note responding to his
comments.
Front-month Brent crude futures fell to a low of $64.71 per barrel on Tuesday, before edging back to $64.85 by 0345 GMT.
U.S. crude was at $60.23 a barrel, up 3 cents from its last settlement and 14 cents above its session low of $60.09 per barrel.
Analysts said that firm refinery demand was also supporting prices.
"Refineries are on the cusp of higher crude runs as we
approach 3Q2015. On balance, we think any short-term price weakness will
be dissolved by the pickup in end-user demand, higher runs and
shrinking U.S. supply growth," JP Morgan said in its latest monthly oil
report.
Singapore-based Phillip Futures said that prices would
likely fall back later this week as an OPEC decision not to cut
production would mean there was "only room for a worsening oversupply".
High production by OPEC, but also from other regions
like U.S. shale producers and Russia, has contributed to oversupply and
left tankers filled with millions of barrels of oil without buyers.
Saudi Arabia's Naimi was the key architect of OPEC's
decision at its last meeting in November 2014 not to cut crude
production despite a growing global glut, exacerbated by a boom in U.S.
shale oil, triggering sharp oil price falls.
(Editing by Michael Perry and Joseph Radford)
Reuters by Henning Gloystein
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