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#Futures Movers: Brent oil settles at $80 as OPEC+ sticks with its output plan despite omicron risk to demand

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#Futures Movers: Brent oil settles at $80 as OPEC+ sticks with its output plan despite omicron risk to demand

Oil futures rose on Tuesday, with global benchmark Brent crude at $80 a barrel for its highest close in almost six weeks.

Major oil producers known as OPEC+ said they would stick to their plan to gradually boost output next month, despite risks to oil demand tied to the spread of the omicron variant of the coronavirus.

The consortium is “staying the course with its original plan” and “maintaining the linear growth path it has been adhering to for months,” said Stewart Glickman, energy equity analyst at CFRA Research.

After a meeting via videoconference Tuesday, OPEC and its allies, together known as OPEC+, announced that they would continue their agreement to raise monthly production by 400,000 barrels a day in February, as expected.

“This is arguably vindication for not changing course despite the arrival of omicron,” Glickman told MarketWatch. “When this variant arrived in late November, there was some concern that perhaps omicron would materially affect demand,” and Brent prices dropped about 10%, but Brent has since recovered.  

At the December meeting, the group had also extended the gradual monthly production increases, but said that it would keep that meeting “in session pending further developments of the pandemic.” Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman on Tuesday announced the closure of that open session meeting, according to a tweet from Amena Bakr, deputy bureau chief and chief OPEC correspondent at Energy Intelligence.

The group’s next meeting is set for Feb. 2.

The additional supply from OPEC+ is a signal that there is “continued cohesion within the producer group that oil demand will continue to grow despite the recent omicron variant causing some restrictions,” said Peter McNally, vice president and global lead for industrials materials and energy at Third Bridge.

Against that backdrop, March Brent crude
BRN00,
+0.14%

BRNH22,
+0.14%
rose $1.02, or 1.3%, to settle at $80 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe after touching a high at $80.55. The settlement was the highest for a front-month contract since Nov. 25, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

West Texas Intermediate crude for February delivery
CL00,
+1.38%

CLG22,
+1.38%,
the U.S. benchmark, rose 91 cents, or 1.2%, to settle at $76.99 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The demand outlook for oil “remains positive as the less lethal omicron variant is having a modest impact on near term demand and is likely to accelerate the increase in herd resistance to the coronavirus,” Jay Hatfield, chief investment officer at Infrastructure Capital Management in New York, told MarketWatch.

Still, the biggest “wild cards” for oil are “supply-focused,” said Glickman.

“Geopolitical intrigue between Russia and Ukraine raises the possibility that Russia could reduce natural gas and/or oil exports to Europe — or at least threaten to do so,” he said.

Read: Russia-Ukraine tensions mean Europe’s natural-gas volatility unlikely to fade

There’s also the possibility that “sanctions are lifted from Iran could bring Iranian barrels back to market and could weigh on oil prices,” he said. “We could see the Biden administration angling for the latter if for no other reason than providing quicker relief to high prices at the pump.”

On Nymex Tuesday, February gasoline futures
RBG22,
+1.19%
tacked on 0.9% to $2.276 a gallon, while February heating oil
HOG22,
+2.38%
added 2.2% to $2.41 a gallon.

February natural gas
NGG22,
-1.49%
settled at $3.717 per million British thermal units, down 2.6% after climbing by 2.3% on Monday.

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