Oil price at lowest in 2018, Nigeria's budget not in danger -Report



By Energy Worth with Agency Report


Crude oil price headed toward its worst week in almost a year as the global risk-asset rout further rankled investors already concerned over growing U.S. output undermining Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC’s efforts to tighten markets and prop up prices, it has been reported.

Nigeria’s 2018 budget is based on $45 per barrel and 2.3 million daily oil output. However, US West Texas Intermediate, WTI, crude was at $61.58 a barrel and was down 21 cents, or 0.3 percent, from their last settlement.

Brent crude price was at $65.28 per barrel down 23 cents, or 0.4 percent, from the previous close.

However, with the drop in crude price at $65.28 per barrel, Nigeria’s is not yet at risk over the funding of its N8.612 trillion 2018 budget.

The dips followed bigger falls  on Wednesday, when crude touched one-month lows and erased most of 2018’s early gains.

Support  on Thudsday  came from the second outage in as many months on the 450,000 barrels per day Forties pipeline network, Britain’s biggest, which supplies much of the crude underpinning Brent futures.

But the biggest market driver was US production which averaged above 10 million barrels per day (bpd) for the first time since the early 1970s last week, reaching 10.25 million bpd.

Until the early 2000s the US were oil starved, importing a peak of 12 million bpd. But in one of the steepest rises of any oil producer in modern history, US output has surged by more than 20 percent since mid-2016, undermining OPEC’s and Russia’s efforts to tighten the market and prop up prices by withholding production.

Market watchers say the OPEC-led restraint is arguably the biggest enabler for America’s production boom, handing over market share at higher oil prices.

At 10.25 million bpd, U.S. output is now higher than the previous 10.044 million bpd record from back in 1970, topping Saudi Arabia and within reach of Russia’s. Weighing further on prices was that U.S. commercial crude stocks rose by 1.9 million barrels in the week to February 2, to 420.25 million barrels.

The official U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) this week upped its 2018 output forecast to 10.59 million bpd, up by a whopping 300,000 bpd from their last forecast just a week earlier. “What surprised the most was the large spike in oil production to 10.25 million barrels per day which was significantly higher than 9.92 million from the previous week,” said Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at futures brokerage Forex.com.

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