Oil climbed above $50 a barrel after Iraq’s oil minister said some oil producers would be in favor of extending production cuts until the end of 2018.
West Texas International crude, the US benchmark, was up by 0.7% at $50.70 per barrel, while Brent crude oil, the international benchmark, was higher by 0.3% at $55.66 per barrel at 9:09 a.m. ET.
According to Bloomberg, Iraqi oil minister Jabbar al-Luaibi said that although there’s “no firm decision yet,” some producers are thinking about deeper and longer cuts.
“Some think that cuts should be extended beyond March, three or four months, or six months, or maybe till the end of 2018,” he said. “Some, like Ecuador and other countries, even Iraq, think there should be another cut of 1%.”
On Friday, OPEC’s Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee is meeting in Vienna. Attendees are expected to draft the cartel’s “2018 action plan” ahead of the cartel’s meeting in November, said Helima Croft, global head of currency strategy at RBC Capital Markets, in a research note published two weeks back.
"We believe that momentum continues to build for extending the output agreement beyond April, but finding a way to bring currently exempted countries into the agreement and curbing cheating looks more challenging," she said.
OPEC and non-OPEC producers agreed in May to extend production cuts through March 2018. Notably, Saudi Arabia and Russia together said they favored the extension before the official OPEC meeting.
The cartel and several other major producers (but not the US) first agreed to slash production back in November 2016, with the Saudis agreeing to the deepest cut. The decision to reduce production reflected producers' desires to end the global supply glut, which kept oil prices depressed for over two years and increased domestic financial stresses.