Oil prices hit $    50 a barrel on Thursday  for the first time in seven months, then bounced  below that level and settled lower on the day as  investors worried robust price gains could  encourage more output and add to the global  glut. Wildfires in Canada’s oil sands, unrest  in the Nigerian and Libyan energy sectors, and a  near economic meltdown in OPEC member Venezuela  have knocked out nearly 4 million barrels per day  in immediate production, sparking a buying frenzy  in crude futures.    Brent and U.S. crude’s West Texas  Intermediate (WTI) futures have risen nearly 90  percent from 12-year lows hit this winter. They  have recouped about half of what they lost since  mid-2014 when both traded at above $    100 a  barrel.    A climb above $    50 per barrel could spur  producers, particularly U.S. shale drillers, to  revive scrapped operations, which could bloat  supplies and trigger a new selloff, analysts  said.    “We are viewing current risk/reward  ratios as unfavorable toward new longs at current  levels,” said Jim Ritterbusch of  Chicago-based oil markets consultancy Ritterbusch  & Associates, who cites a potential drop of  Brent to $    47.50.                       Brent LCOc1 surged as high as $    50.51, its  highest since early November, then retreated and  settled down 15 cents at $    49.74 a barrel.    WTI CLc1 fell 8 cents to settle at $    49.48,  after reaching $    50.21, its highest since early  October.    U.S. crude for the balance of 2016 CLBALst  remained above $    50 while the calendar strip  for 2017 CLYstc1 was above $    51.                       “I am maintaining my oil view at neutral  with a short term bias to the upside,” said  Dominick Chirichella, senior partner at the Energy  Management Institute in New York. “The  global surplus still exists and there is still a  possibility that oil prices could retrace  further.”    But he conceded that crude was trading  “more and more in sync with the forward  looking or perception view with the overall  bearish fundamentals mostly priced into the market  as production issues offset any short term  negativity”.                       Adding to outage concerns, a source at Chevron  Corp (CVX.N) said  the producer’s activities in Nigeria had  been “grounded” by a militant attack,  worsening a situation that had already restricted  hundreds of thousands of barrels from reaching the  market.        Investors will watch next month’s meeting  of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting  Countries (OPEC) for signs of an output hike.    “The bigger risk is that following the  meeting, (the) Saudis will increase production to  meet rising summer domestic demand, to preserve  market share in its oil wars with Iran and  Iraq,” David Hufton, head of PVM Oil  brokers, said.     (Additional reporting by Karolin Schaps, Ron  Bousso and Simon Falush in LONDON and Keith Wallis  in SINGAPORE; Editing by Marguerita Choy)   
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Oil dips after hitting $50/bbl as glut worries resurface – Reuters
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