Brent crude rose 94 cents to US$45.90 a barrel by 0913 GMT while US West Texas Intermediate crude gained 76 cents to US$43.18 a barrel. Both benchmarks jumped five per cent last week. — Reuters pic
Brent crude rose 94 cents to US$45.90 a barrel by 0913 GMT while US West Texas Intermediate crude gained 76 cents to US$43.18 a barrel. Both benchmarks jumped five per cent last week. — Reuters pic

LONDON, Nov 23 — Oil prices rose more than one per cent today, extending last week’s gains as traders eyed a recovery in demand due to successful coronavirus vaccine trials.

Sentiment was also bolstered by expectations that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec), Russia and other producers, a group known as Opec+, might extend a deal to restrain output.

Brent crude rose 94 cents to US$45.90 (RM188) a barrel by 0913 GMT while US West Texas Intermediate crude gained 76 cents to US$43.18 a barrel. Both benchmarks jumped five per cent last week.

The contango structure in the market, where the prices of front-month delivery contracts are lower than those for delivery six months later, narrowed to 32 US cents, its smallest since mid June, indicating that concerns about a glut were receding.

Advertisement

Outlook for demand has improved with news indicating progress towards developing Covid-19 vaccines. A US official said first inoculations in the United States could start a day or two after regulatory approval was secured.

British drugmaker AstraZeneca said today its vaccine, developed along with the University of Oxford, could be around 90 per cent effective under one dosing regimen.

PVM analyst Stephen Brennock said the news was detaching sentiment from “gloomy fundamentals.”

Advertisement

“Investors are ignoring near-term headwinds, chief among which are surging global Covid infections, and instead looking ahead to next summer,” he said.

On the supply side, Opec+, which meets on November 30 and December 1. It will look at options to extend their deal on output cuts by at least three months from January.

Smaller Russian oil companies are still planning to pump more crude this year, a group representing the producers said.

Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi group today said it fired a missile that struck a Saudi Aramco site in the western city of Jeddah. There was no immediate Saudi confirmation of the claim. Aramco’s main oil facilities in are in the east. — Reuters