Crude oil prices remain weak ahead of OPEC meeting

By Henning Gloystein

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Crude oil prices held at low levels in early trading in Asia on Tuesday as traders bet on continued high production from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) ahead of its meeting later this week.

U.S. crude was trading at $41.86 per barrel at 0209 GMT on Tuesday, up 21 cents, but still more than 10 percent down since the start of November.

Internationally traded Brent futures were at $44.66 a barrel, up five cents.

"The focus for markets this week will be the 168th OPEC Conference on Friday and U.S. crude oil inventories. The market will now be expecting crude oil stocks to decline through to the end of the year, in line with seasonal patterns. A failure to do so could see WTI crude fall through $40 per barrel in coming weeks," ANZ said on Tuesday.

On OPEC policy, which is heavily influenced by its biggest producer, Saudi Arabia, the bank said that it expected "to see Saudi Arabia hold and keep oil production steady in the face of declining prices."

OPEC has shown resolve to stick to the decision adopted at last year's policy meeting to pump oil vigorously to protect its market share against other producers like Russia and especially U.S. shale drillers.

Financial traders are acting accordingly, with hedge funds' bullish wagers on U.S. crude oil falling to a more than five-year low amid concerns that oil output in the United States was not falling fast enough to offset a global supply glut that has resulted in a more than 60 percent price rout since June last year.

U.S. government data showed no meaningful decline in shale output despite falling rig counts, adding to a glut that is seeing 0.7-2.5 million barrels per day produced beyond demand.

Morgan Stanley said that an increase in U.S. interest rates expected this year will delay a rebound in oil prices.

"We think the USD continues to strengthen after a December liftoff, delaying the rebound in oil prices until 4Q16," the bank said.

The bank added that it saw oil oversupply to persist until mid-2016.

"Oversupply in oil markets could disappear by year-end. This drives a 4Q rebound in our price expectations, which we expect to continue into 2017."

In fundamentals, China's economy showed renewed signs of weakness, with its manufacturing falling to a three year low

However, Japan's manufacturing accelerated, albeit at low levels.

(Editing by Richard Pullin)

Article Published: 01/12/2015