Oil prices jumped over 2 percent on Monday to  their highest since November 2015 on growing  Nigerian oil output disruptions and after  long-time bear Goldman Sachs said the market had  ended almost two years of oversupply and flipped  to a deficit. Brent crude futures were trading at $    48.83  per barrel at 1118 GMT, up $    1 or 2.05 percent.  U.S. crude futures were up 98 cents, or 2.08  percent, at $    47.19 a barrel.    Supply disruptions around the world of as much  as 3.75 million barrels per day (bpd) have wiped  out a glut that pulled down oil prices by as much  as 70 percent between 2014 and early 2016.    The disruptions triggered a U-turn in the  outlook of Goldman Sachs, which had long warned of  global storage hitting capacity and of yet another  oil price crash to as low as $    20 per  barrel.    “The oil market has gone from nearing  storage saturation to being in deficit much  earlier than we expected,” Goldman said.    “The market likely shifted into deficit  in May … driven by both sustained strong  demand as well as sharply declining  production,” it said.                       However, Goldman cautioned that the market  would flip back into a surplus in the first half  of 2017 as it said prices around $    50 per  barrel in the second half of 2016 would see  exploration and production activity picking  up.    In Nigeria, output has fallen to its lowest in  decades following several acts of sabotage.    In the Americas, U.S. officials warned they  were growing increasingly concerned by the  possibility of an economic and political meltdown  in Venezuela amid low oil prices.     Venezuela’s oil production has already  fallen by at least 188,000 bpd this year.                       In the United States, crude production has  fallen to 8.8 million bpd, 8.4 percent below 2015  peaks as the sector suffers a wave of  bankruptcies.    And in China, output fell 5.6 percent to 4.04  million bpd in April, year-on-year.    Countering this, supply rose from the  Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries  (OPEC) as its producers are engaged in a race for  market share.                       OPEC pumped 32.44 million bpd in April, up  188,000 bpd from March, the highest since at least  2008.    Also preventing steeper price jumps was a  recovery in output in Canada following closures  due to a wildfire, as well as bloated global crude  storages.     “The inventory buffer may be preventing  full price recovery and … the market is  rightly nervous about the sustainability of  outages,” said Morgan Stanley.    Barclays said that “while the supply-side  disruptions are supporting oil market balances,  refinery margins are starting to weaken,  especially in Asia,” adding that weaker  demand from those refiners could produce  “downside risk to prices in Q3  16.”     (Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein;  editing by Adrian Croft and Jason Neely)
Monday, May 16, 2016
Oil prices rise on Nigeria outages, Goldman forecast – Reuters
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