Oil prices dip as questions linger over Saudi production

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Oil prices dip as questions linger over Saudi production

Oil prices fell more than one percent on Tuesday as the market hung on tenterhooks following attacks on Saudi Arabian crude facilities that cut the kingdom’s production in half and sent prices soaring by the most in decades.

The attack heightened uncertainty in a market that had become relatively subdued in recent months due to slowing growth as the US-China trade war rages on, and now faces the loss of crude from Saudi Arabia, usually the supplier of last resort.

A gauge of oil-market volatility on Monday rose to the highest level since December of last year, and trading activity showed investors expect higher prices in coming months.

Brent crude was down 77 cents, or 1.1 percent, at $68.25 a barrel while West Texas Intermediate was down 82 cents, or 1.3 percent, at $62.08 a barrel.

Crude prices surged by nearly 20 percent on Monday as they responded to Saturday’s attack, the biggest jump in almost 30 years, before closing approximately 15 percent higher.

“With the US ‘locked and loaded’ awaiting signs from Saudi Arabia that Iran was involved, tensions in the Middle East could get worse before they get better. Under these circumstances the price of oil could remain elevated for some time yet,” Cityindex analyst Fiona Cincotta said.

“However, let’s not also forget that the demand picture isn’t great right now which will dampen the oil price quickly. Most recently China’s industrial production figures disappointed overnight,” Cincotta said.

Saudi Arabia is the world’s biggest oil exporter and, with its comparatively large spare capacity, has been the supplier of last resort for decades.

The attack on state-owned producer Saudi Aramco’s crude-processing facilities at Abqaiq and Khurais cut output by 5.7 million barrels a day and threw into question its ability to maintain oil exports.

The company has not given a specific timeline for the resumption of full output.

“I’m very concerned about how long it’s going to take to get the production back on. Aramco announced today that it could be, they went from weeks to talking about possibly months before the production was brought back on,” oil and gas industry expert Bob Cavnar told Al Jazeera.

“Saudi has strategic reserve, the US has a strategic reserve. But if this goes on for more than three or four weeks, I can see a sustained level of higher oil prices for quite some time until the production in Saudi Arabia is normalised,” he added.

Refiners in Asia, the world’s biggest consuming region, were scrambling for alternative supplies, while US crude producers ramped up efforts to export crude and Saudi Arabia tried to secure refined products.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES