20/08/2014 01:28 AST

OPEC is not worried about a slide in oil prices toward $100 a barrel, delegates from the producer group said, with current levels seen as acceptable for producers while higher seasonal demand in the coming weeks was expected to support the market.

Brent crude fell to a 14-month low of $101.11 a barrel on Monday as investor concerns over conflict in Ukraine and Iraq eased and Libyan output rose. The drop brought prices below the level some in OPEC need for their budget needs.

But delegates from three members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries told Reuters the decline in prices was not an immediate concern.

“There’s no reason to worry,” said a delegate from one of OPEC’s Gulf members.

“We see the dip as a correction. Action will only be taken based on fundamentals and for the time being the price is still fair for producers.”

He did not comment on what price would prompt concern in OPEC.

Brent is still above the $100-mark favored by top exporter Saudi Arabia, which many others in the 12-member group also support.

Prices need to fall further to be outside an acceptable zone cited by Petroleum and Mineral Resources Minister Ali Al-Naimi in June, when OPEC last met to review its output policy. Oil at “$100, $110, $95 is a good price,” he said.

An oil official from an African OPEC member took a similar view of the price drop to the Gulf delegate.

“It’s just a seasonal phenomenon,” the official said.

“The price will probably go back up in the autumn when demand picks up. There is no reason for panic. Anyway, the price will not go below $100.”

OPEC has a nominal target to produce 30 million barrels per day and in July, pumped around that level, according to a Reuters survey.

The organization is not scheduled to meet to review its output policy until November.

But Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE could trim supply informally if needed, such as to make room for a further recovery in Libya or to support prices, said an OPEC source.

In the last few years, OPEC has left its target unchanged and left market management to informal supply tweaks by the three Gulf producers.

“The Gulf countries could cut back if they see a need,” the source said. “Other than that, I’ve not heard of any concern.”


Arab News

Ticker Price Volume
JARIR 177.89 111,251
RIBL 13.83 1,519,548
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
Saudi Public Investment Fund signs agreement with Six Flags to create amusement park in Riyadh

05/04/2018

Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) has signed an agreement with Six Flags to develop and design an amusement park in Riyadh. Six Flags, the world’s leading international amusement park compa

Arab News

Green energy drive will boost KSA employment: Saudi Arabia’s renewable energy chief

05/04/2018

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, Turki Mohammed Al-Shehri explains how an expanding renewables industry will boost employment as well as pave the way for a greener future.

A massiv

Arab News

Dubai house prices, rents drop in first quarter of 2018

05/04/2018

Dubai’s residential property market continued to soften in the first three months of this year, in line with analysts’ forecasts, with rental values recording a more pronounced fall than sales prices

The National

Saudi Arabia lifts GCC index buoyed by strong oil prices

05/04/2018

Buoyed by a strong oil price of $70 per barrel, Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul shot up by over 6 per cent in March 2018, according to Kuwait Financial Centre’s (Markaz’s) recently released Monthly Markets Re

Times of Oman

Banks’ real estate credit at QR147.7bn

05/04/2018

Qatar banks’ combined credit facilities to real estate sector rose by QR17bn to QR147.7bn in 2017. The banks’ credit to various sectors stood at QR911bn at the end of 2017, up from QR839bn recorded i

The Peninsula