Sunday, December 3, 2017

Oil pares gains after report on Flynn in Russia probe
NEW YORK: Oil pared gains
on Friday with a decline in U.S. stock markets after an ABC News report added
to concerns about President Donald Trump's exposure to a probe into Russian
meddling in last year's campaign.
Wall Street's main indexes
all fell by more than 1 percent after the ABC report that former national
security adviser Michael Flynn was prepared to tell investigators that prior to
taking office, Trump directed him to make contact with Russians.
Flynn, a central figure in
a federal investigation into Moscow's alleged interference in the 2016 U.S.
presidential election, pleaded guilty on Friday to lying to the FBI.
"Oil prices have pared
earlier gains in tandem with losses seen in the equity market partly because
news regarding Michael Flynn," said Abhishek Kumar, Senior Energy Analyst
at Interfax Energy's Global Gas Analytics in London.
Brent futures LCOc1 were
trading at $63.58 a barrel. That put the new front month February contract up
just one cent from where January expired on Thursday. The lower priced February
future, was up about 1.5 percent from where it closed in the previous session.
U.S. West Texas
Intermediate crude CLc1 was up 75 cents, or 1.3 percent, at $58.15 per barrel.
WTI's January contract CLF8 does not expire till Dec. 19.
Both benchmarks were on
track to decline for the week, down about 1 percent. Before the Flynn news,
crude prices had been approaching their highest levels since the summer of 2015
after OPEC and other major producers agreed to continue reining in output until
the end of 2018 to try to reduce the global oil glut and boost prices.
The Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries and some non-OPEC producers led by Russia agreed
on Thursday to keep current limits on output in place until the end of next
year.
The deal, which has been in
place since January and was due to expire in March, has seen producers reduce
output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd), helping to halve global oil
oversupply over the past year.
The latest OPEC agreement,
however, included a possible early exit from the deal if the market overheats.
Russia, which this year
reduced production significantly with OPEC for the first time, has been pushing
for a clear message on how to exit the cuts so the market does not flip into a
deficit too soon, prices do not rally too fast and rival U.S. shale firms do
not boost output further.
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About M. Imran Sharif
M. Imran Sharif born in Hyderabad Sindh, he initially worked as a photographer with Pakistani newspaper and currently working as a special correspondent in The Financial Daily since August 2007, He began his journalistic career with Daily Imroz as a photographer.
2 years after serving in Imroz, he served as Special Correspondent of the monthly "Awami Awaz" Hyderabad.
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