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– Brace for Petrol and diesel prices to go up as the revenue from selling crude
oil is less as oil price have gone below USD 50 with a real possibility of
going under USD 40 this month, The Malaysian government again having a major dilemma,
where to find cash now to pay the civil servants as their calculations’ gave
gone upside down. The weekly fuel prices adjustments from April 01, 2017 will
be differed as cannot let the Petrol pumps to set prices and government need to
be in control of the prices and cheat on it to earn extra revenue from oil prices.
Ringgit will be on free fall and possibility of hitting 1 USD – RM 4.75 this
month for to earn more ringgits for fewer US dollars
PRU14
not on back burner because of the slide in crude Oil prices
PRU14
not on back burner because of the slide in crude Oil prices
Oil is on track to break through the
key psychological level of $50 a barrel after a ninth straight rise in U.S.
crude stockpiles came at exactly the wrong moment, analysts said Wednesday.
The amount of crude oil in U.S. storage rose to another record
high on Wednesday, jumping 8.2 million barrels from the previous week, the
Energy Information Administration reported. The increase was more than four
times what analysts expected.
Weekly figures also showed U.S. oil production continuing to
tick up toward 9.1 million barrels a day, the highest level in more than a
year. That provided further evidence that rising American output is confounding
efforts by the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries ,
Russia and 10 other exporters to reduce global oil inventories by curbing their
own output.
The data sent U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate (New
York Mercantile Exchange: @CL.1) crude prices plunging more than 5
percent to a nearly three-month low.
The plunge through a number of lows on Wednesday puts oil on a
path to test the December low of $49.95 a barrel, said John Kilduff, founding
partner at energy hedge fund Again Capital.
"From there you could accelerate," he told CNBC,
adding that $50 "was the fail-safe." Kilduff's downside target, once
oil breaks below $50 a barrel, is $42.
For the last three months, oil has traded in a range between
$49.61 and $55.24.
According to Kilduff, all the elements are in place for oil to
break below its three-month range: lack of cohesion among OPEC members, bearish
statements from oil ministers at CERAWeek conference by IHS Markit and
subdued refinery activity as operators perform seasonal maintenance in the
United States.
Bearish
OPEC comments at CERAWeek
On Tuesday, Saudi Oil Minister Khalid al-Falih warned at CERAWeek that the kingdom
would only support OPEC's intervention in markets for a "restricted period
of time" and would not "underwrite the investments of others at our
own expense and long-term interests."
Later that evening, oil ministers convened a last-minute press briefing, where they
reaffirmed their commitment to the production cut deal.
"The Saudis almost explicitly warned that if we don't get
cooperation or we see cheating we're not going to be someone's patsy
forever," said Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at Oil Price
Information Service.
Saudi Arabia has so far provided the lion's share of output cuts
as OPEC and other producers seek to remove 1.8 million barrels from the market
in the first six months of 2016. Iraq, OPEC's second largest producer, produced
above its quota in January.
Also at CERAWeek on Tuesday, Iraqi Minister of Oil Jabbar Ali
Al-Luiebi said Baghdad could increase its output capacity to
5 million barrels a day by the second half of 2017, raising concerns about its
commitments to production cuts.
Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, said $50 can now
be considered a target. If oil prices break that level, market watchers can
expect more talk from oil ministers about extending the OPEC agreement another
six months when producers meet in May, he added.
"I think that OPEC is hoping they can wait it out so they
don't have to make a decision in May to continue with production cuts, but they
may be forced into that decision given the high inventories here in the
U.S.," he said.
Those inventory builds are likely to continue through the refinery
maintenance season, according to Lipow.
Kettle
finally boils over
Further fueling the fall to $50 a barrel is the record number of
bets traders have recently made on crude rising further, said Matt Smith,
director of commodity research at shipment tracking firm ClipperData. As oil
prices fall to the bottom of their range, more traders will look to unwind
those positions, he explained.
"It's really been like a kettle
boiling for the last few weeks in terms of having traded in a very tight range.
There's been this pressure building form a technical perspective," he
said. "As that happens, as that pressure builds, we tend to pop
violently."
Kloza also sees the anniversary of crude oil storage leases
playing into the problem.
Many traders took out one-year leases around this time in 2016,
when crude prices were near the lows of the downturn, he explained. Now that
the oil price curve is flattening — meaning prices for future crude deliveries
are declining relative to current costs — traders have little incentive to sign
another one-year lease. Instead they're selling that oil into an oversupplied
market.
While the next 30 days provide an environment ripe for a drop
below $50 a barrel, Kloza said, he doesn't see an "apocalyptic move
lower."
"We may break below that range for about 90 days, but in
the end I think we'll be above it come driving season," he said.
"From now through let's say May, it may be stormy times," he said.
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