Thursday, 4 August 2016

Iraq expects to double Halfaya oilfield output in 2018

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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Iraq expects to double output at the southern Halfaya oilfield, to reach its planned maximum of 400,000 barrels per day (bpd), in 2018, the oil ministry said in a statement.
The government has approved PetroChina’s plans to launch the third phase of development at the field that now produces about 200,000 bpd, said the statement, citing Adnan Noshi, head of state-run Maysan Oil Co which oversees oilfields in the namesake province.
Iraq last year boosted production by more than 500,000 bpd, despite spending cuts by companies working at the southern fields and conflict with Islamic State militants.
Iraqi officials and oil analysts expect further growth in the country’s exports this year, although at a slower rate than in 2015 when it was the fastest source of OPEC supply growth.

Source: Reuters

Iran Adopts Oil Contract as Glut No Barrier to Boost Output

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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Iran approved an outline for a new oil contract model, taking the OPEC member a step closer to welcoming foreign investment in its energy industry and boosting production even more into an oversupplied market.
The outline was approved at a cabinet meeting Wednesday, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported, without saying where it got the information. Priority will be given to boosting production at jointly owned oil and gas fields, state radio reported, citing Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh. The government wants to lure international oil companies that can make long-term investments worth billions of dollars and bring cutting-edge technology into Iran after sanctions that restricted its crude supplies were eased in January.
Big oil companies such as Italy’s Eni SpA and France’s Total SA have expressed an interest in developing Iran’s oil and gas fields. Iran has been working on the oil contract model for the past two years. The country hopes companies will invest as much as $50 billion a year. It’s already succeeding in meeting its pledge to regain market share it lost due to the sanctions over its nuclear program. Production was 3.55 million barrels a day in July, 27 percent higher for this year and the most since December 2011, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“Any process is going to take time and a lot of steps before any investment goes into the ground,” Edward Bell, commodities analyst at Emirates NBD in Dubai, said by phone. “This isn’t going to be a step change in the way markets are going now.”
Brent crude prices fell 15 percent in July amid a growing recognition the global surplus of crude will take time to clear. Iran seeks to reach an eight-year high for daily output of 4 million barrels by the end of 2016, with foreign investment helping it regain the position as OPEC’s second-largest producer. It was third-largest in July, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The new contract model was approved in a cabinet session presided by President Hassan Rouhani. The Oil Ministry will review each contract to be signed by potential new investors, including details on price, duration and other terms of the project, according to state radio.
Investors will want to know exactly what conditions they will face in Iran, such as joint venture regulations and dispute resolution, Emirates NBD’s Bell said. “Once we get the full details on that, we will get a much better sense of how attractive the contracts are.”

Source: Bloomberg

American Oil Producers Reduce Production Costs, Gain Edge Facing OPEC Glut Pressure

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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Oil prices are back on the downtrend. There are several reasons for the decline in prices, among them are renewed concerns over Gasoline glut, lower Saudi prices and signs of increase in U.S. production level. While all this is the nightmare scenario for OPEC, it’s not necessarily one for the U.S. OPEC and Saudi Arabia in particular, have decided long ago to not cut their production levels, thus flooding the market in hopes to bring the prices down so competition abroad will have no choice but to pronounce OPEC the go to place for oil. Instead companies in America strategically and quickly cut productions costs, and now most can produce way below the levels the Saudi’s need. International Western Petroleum, Inc. (OTCQB: INWP), Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE: PXD), Halliburton Company (NYSE: HAL), Schlumberger Limited (NYSE: SLB), Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE: XOM )
OPEC and the Saudi’s have managed to inflict damage but have failed to take fracking into consideration. It is through fracking and new extraction technology that production costs were cut significantly, thus giving American companies an edge. The numbers are impressive, the ‘decline rate’ of production of a new oil wells over the first four months were 90pc a decade ago, 31pc in 2012, and is now 18 pc. Frackers learned how to extract more for less.
As a result, smaller companies are looking for ways to increase fracking production levels. Just this May, CEO of International Western Petroleum, Inc. (OTC: INWP), Ross Ramsey said in a statement, “We also plan an Enhanced Oil Recovery program to improve the production of the Bend Arch Lion 1A concession starting this month with additional fracking into its highly producible pay zones.”
International Western Petroleum Inc. is a small company which focuses on the acquisition, development and exploration of crude oil and natural gas properties in Texas. The company announced this week that that it has completed its application to up-list to NASDAQ Capital Markets, to increase the company’s recognition and value. The news come after last month International Western Petroleum announced that it has executed a definitive Purchase and Sale Agreement to purchase all assets of a privately held Houston-based exploration and production company in the Texas Gulf Coast region.
Some of the larger companies were bragging recently about their fracking capabilities at low costs. For example, CEO of Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE: PXD), Scott Sheffield recently said that that improved methods of hydraulic fracturing have reduced production costs in certain areas of Taxes to $2.25 per barrel pre-tax.
Halliburton Company (NYSE: HAL), world’s largest provider of equipment used in hydraulic fracturing, and their rival Schlumberger Limited (NYSE: SLB) both announced last month that demand for their fracking equipment was returning once again.
Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE: XOM) has been investing large amounts of money in fracking overseas, seeking overseas licenses. Just last December Exxon filed for an environmental permit to explore for shale oil and natural gas in Colombia using hydraulic fracturing technology. The company’s explorations have not always been successful however, and in 2015 have left numerous sites across Europe and Asia.

Source: Financial Buzz

Oil Traders Have Almost Zero Faith in Key Libyan Ports Resuming

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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Oil traders who specialize in purchasing cargoes from Mediterranean ports view the chances of an imminent resumption of shipments from two key Libyan terminals as almost zero, even after a deal was struck to reopen the facilities.
Three out of six traders questioned by Bloomberg said they don’t expect a single cargo to be shipped from Ras Lanuf or Es Sider ports by the end of next month. Two said they were pessimistic any deals would last long enough to allow a resumption, while another said only a few cargoes would get shipped if there’s a restart. Libya’s unity government reached an agreement July 28 with Petroleum Facilities Guard members over pay in exchange for reopening the terminals.
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Libyan oil officials have made multiple pledges over the past few years that the nation’s exports would revive, only for those promises to fail to materialize. A resumption of the North African country’s production to 2011 levels would add about 1.3 million barrels a day to world supplies, extending a glut in global crude markets that caused prices to crash. While the two ports have reopened, the fields that feed them have yet to restart.
“It always seems to be a very game-theory situation here, in that as long as the oil’s not flowing, there’s nothing to fight over: everyone’s incentivized to make a deal,” said Seth Kleinman, European head of energy strategy at Citigroup Inc. “As soon as the oil starts flowing again, along with the money, then you have something to fight over” and export restarts will be “fitful”.
Exports from all Libyan ports dropped to about 226,000 barrels a day in July after reaching a six-month high in June, according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. There have been no exports from either port since December 2014 with force majeures in place. Production is about 300,000 barrels a day compared with almost 1.6 million in 2011 and the ouster of Moammar Qaddafi.
Traders remain skeptical that a regular flow of crude can be achieved in the near future because of damage to infrastructure at the terminals and also because ofblockades by tribes and local factions the ports and oil fields. Those deposits include the Repsol SA-operated Sharara, Libya’s largest, and ENI SpA’s El Feel, or Elephant.
Two of the traders booked ships previously for cargoes that were subsequently canceled, making them less confident about a restart now, they said. The six traders asked not to be identified because they aren’t authorized to speak to the media.

Source: Bloomberg

Fitch: European Oil Majors Unlikely to Balance 2016 Cash Flows

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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European major oil and gas companies’ 1H16 results indicate they are likely to generate large negative free cash flows (FCFs) for the full year as average oil prices remain lower than in 2015, Fitch Ratings says. This will push up leverage in the near term but we expect cash deficits to fall in 2017 as oil prices start to gradually recover and the majors progress with their cost-cutting initiatives.
Four Fitch-rated European oil majors (Shell, Total, BP and Eni) announced results last week, with all of them reporting lower operating earnings due to weaker oil prices. On average, the majors’ 1H16 per-barrel EBITDAX decreased by 36% year-on-year as the average Brent price fell from USD58/bbl in 1H15 to USD41/bbl in 1H16 and as refining margins moderated. Capex also fell but the decrease was not enough to offset lower cash inflows.
This resulted in average 1H16 pre-dividend and post-dividend FCFs of minus USD5/bbl and minus USD11/bbl, respectively (before working capital movements). These figures suggest that oil majors will find it difficult to balance their cash inflows and outflows until oil recovers to above USD50/bbl, which we expect to happen in 2017-2018. According to our forecasts the majors should significantly improve their cash flow generation in 2017, with the average pre-dividend FCF turning positive and average post-dividend FCF improving to around minus USD5/bbl. This progress should be driven by a combination of slightly higher oil prices, further cost cutting and falling capex.
Large negative FCFs in 2016 means leverage will increase and is likely to be outside the range we normally consider appropriate for current ratings. Eni is the only exception – we expect its leverage to edge down in 2016 and to remain within our guidance, helped by the sale of its Saipem stake.
However, we rate ‘through the cycle’ and concentrate on the projected 2018 figures, when we expect the cycle to be well on its way to normalising. Shell’s (AA-/Negative) and Total’s (AA-/Negative) Outlooks signal that they will have very limited leverage headroom in 2018, while BP (A/Stable) and Eni (A-/Stable) can absorb a more significant leverage increase at their current rating levels.
Disposals remain an important part of the majors’ efforts to balance their cash flows. We expect disposals to cover around one-third of their post-dividend FCF deficit in 2016. Our assumptions on disposals are more conservative than the companies’ guidance as low oil prices and high supply of assets for sale have resulted in a buyers’ market. This means some disposal programmes may not be realised in full.

Source: Fitch Ratings

Oil Bulls Have Some Comfort on the Way: Citi

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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While oil bears go “wild” at crude’s retreat to $40 a barrel, there’s some comfort on the way for the bulls, according to Citigroup Inc.
As prices plunge and are pulled below support levels amid concerns over swelling global stockpiles, some supply disruptions including those in Nigeria are set to persist and crude at $40 a barrel may spur demand, according to a report from the bank dated Aug. 2.
Crude has declined since early June and tumbled into a bear market amid speculation that ample inventories will blunt the effect of shrinking production and supply outages from Canada to Colombia. That’s after they rebounded from a 12-year low reached earlier in 2016. Still, the global disruptions that partly fueled the earlier price rally and the perception that a bull market had begun may increase next month, Citigroup said in its report.
Brent crude, the benchmark for more than half the world’s oil, traded at $42.14 a barrel on the ICE Futures Europe exchange at 11:01 a.m. in London. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. marker, was at $39.83 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Libyan ‘Headfake’
While a deal in Libya between the Tripoli-based Presidential Council and guards at the OPEC member’s biggest oil ports may encourage bears, it’s “likely another headfake,” analysts including Seth Kleinman wrote in the note. The nation “has devolved into a genuine failed state, run by competing militias, and moving a state from the failed to the not failed column does not happen overnight or over months. It takes years.”
Libyan oil output is expected to remain at about 350,000 barrels a day, according to the bank. Output has dwindled from 1.6 million barrels before a 2011 revolt as various armed factions fought for control of the country holding Africa’s biggest oil reserves.
Force majeure — a legal status protecting a party from liability if it can’t fulfill a contract for reasons beyond its control — on Nigeria’s Qua Iboe and Forcados crude streams after attacks by militants on wells and pipelines may last through August, Citigroup said. Northern Iraqi exports may fall about 100,000 barrels a day this month after an Islamic State assault on the Bai Hassan field, according to the bank.
Global Inventories
The stockpiles of crude and refined oil that built up in industrialized nations during the years of oversupply stand at a record of more than 3 billion barrels, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency. Traders struggling to sell cargoes are hoarding the most barrels on board tankers at sea since the end of the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the agency says.
Citi estimates that global oil inventories have increased by an average of 360,000 barrels a day in the first half of 2016, compared with an average gain of 430,000 barrels a day over the first-half periods over 2010-2014 and below the 1.5 million barrel average in the first six months of last year.
“Oil prices for the remainder of second-half 2016 have a number of hurdles to overcome, most notably the tempered outlook for refinery runs as a result of weak margins, which will further weigh on prompt crude demand and the sizeable excess of oil in storage,” the analysts wrote. “But oil at $40 a barrel is likely to spur investor, commercial and physical demand.”

Source: Bloomberg

Oil up 3 percent on big U.S. gasoline draw; WTI back above $40

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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il prices jumped more than 3 percent on Wednesday, with U.S. crude futures returning to above $40 a barrel, after a larger-than-expected gasoline draw offset a surprise build in crude stockpiles in the No. 1 oil consumer.
U.S. crude inventories rose for a second week in a row, gaining 1.4 million barrels last week, compared with analysts’ expectations for a decrease of 1.4 million barrels, Energy Information Administration (EIA) data showed.
Gasoline stocks slumped by 3.3 million barrels, versus forecasts for a 200,000-barrel drop. The large draw assuaged some market participants’ worry of a gasoline glut amid the peak U.S. summer driving season.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude CLc1 settled up $1.32, or 3.3 percent, at $40.83 a barrel. On Tuesday, it settled below $40 a barrel for the first time since April.
Brent crude LCOc1 rose $1.30, or 3.1 percent, to settle at $43.10. It hit a more than three-month low of $41.51 the previous day.
“We are not surprised to see spot prices rebounding on the gasoline draw,” said Tariq Zahir, trader in crude oil spreads at Tyche Capital Advisors in New York. “But I think this will be short-lived.”
“The bottom line is the Street in the second quarter got a little ahead of itself in calling for rebalancing of supply-demand after Canadian and Nigerian supply disruptions. We are going into the third and fourth quarters with those supplies back online and refinery maintenance coming up.”
Oil rallied from 12-year lows of $26-$27 in the first quarter to almost $53 in June, boosted initially by expectations, later dashed, that OPEC would freeze output and later by supply outages.
But a worldwide oversupply since in motor fuels and other refined products has stymied the rebound. Worries about slowing economies in Asia – the driver of oil demand growth – and Europe have weighed, along with near record-high OPEC output and signs of a new price war by Saudi Arabia for crude.
Troy Vincent, analyst at New York-based oil cargo tracker ClipperData, said while last week’s gasoline draw was a relief, the rise in crude stocks despite a near 1 percent growth in refinery utilization was a “bigger concern”.
The global glut has led many traders to predict lower prices going forth.
“We expect to see a little bit of price consolidation from here but our target really is for $35 WTI, which means any rebound you get will be more of a bear market correction,” said Matthew Tuttle, chief executive of Tuttle Tactical Management in Riverside, Connecticut.
Goldman Sachs held its 2017 forecast of $52.50 and near-term range of $45-$50 for WTI. But it noted that oil’s recent decline came amid supportive factors like the dollar weakening .DXY and refining margins for gasoline 1RBc1-CLc1 widening.
“It will take a strong reversal in positioning to create substantial new upside,” Goldman said.
Source: Reuters (By Barani Krishnan; Additional reporting by Alex Lawler in LONDON and Henning Gloystein in SINGAPORE; Editing by Marguerita Choy and Andrea Ricci)

Why is oil market rebalancing taking so long? Kemp

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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Rebalancing the oil market is proving a long and frustrating process because the oil-exporting countries hit hardest by the slump were the themselves some of the fastest growing oil consumers before prices tumbled.
As oil revenues have shrivelled, their economies have slowed or gone into recession, removing one of the most dynamic drivers of oil demand, and leaving the rest of the world economy to fill the gap.
The slowdown in demand from oil-exporting countries has worsened the oversupply situation and prolonged the market rebalancing process (“Commodity slump intensifies risks to emerging markets”, Reuters, Oct. 8 ).
Rebalancing has come to rely on production cuts, and stimulating additional demand from China and India, as well as the advanced economies which had showed little or negative growth prior to 2014.
The first stage of the rebalancing process is therefore proving exceptionally difficult and slow because it is fighting the headwinds caused by the drop in oil prices.
Once prices start rising significantly, however, the market is likely to tighten faster than many analysts expect because oil consumption in emerging markets is likely to accelerate again with the extra oil revenues.
NEW CONSUMERS
Oil-exporting countries accounted for more than one-third of the global increase in oil consumption outside the United States between 2004 and 2014, as rising oil revenues fuelled a boom in their domestic economies.
Between 2004 and 2014, oil consumption outside the United States increased by 11.4 million barrels per day (bpd) (“Statistical Review of World Energy”, BP, 2016).

Fifteen oil-exporting countries identified separately in the BP Statistical Review accounted for 4.2 million bpd of extra demand (Canada, Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Norway, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Russia, Algeria, Iran, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates).
Consumption growth was especially rapid in Saudi Arabia (+1.7 million bpd), Russia (+0.6 million bpd), Iran (+0.5 million bpd) and the United Arab Emirates (+0.3 million bpd).
But with the exception of Mexico, every one of the 15 oil exporting countries analysed separately in the review reported increased domestic oil consumption during the decade to 2014.
All the rest of global oil consumption growth was attributable to China (+4.4 million bpd), India (+1.3 million bpd) and Brazil (+1.2 million bpd).
Brazil experienced its own oil and agriculture-driven boom between 2004 and 2014 despite remaining a net oil importer throughout.
Brazil behaved like an oil-exporting economy even though the country continued to import refined fuels.

Oil consumption surged by 1.2 million bpd between 2004 and 2014 while oil production rose by just 800,000 bpd.
Brazil has subsequently been hit hard by the drop in oil and other commodity revenues (“Brazil’s fuel consumption falls as the economy shrinks”, Reuters, May 6 ).
If Brazil is analysed as an oil-exporting economy, then the group accounted for nearly half of all the growth in global oil consumption between 2004 and 2014.

POSITIVE FEEDBACK
Commentators tend to divide the world into “net consuming” and “net exporting” countries but the 15 major exporters accounted for 17.3 million bpd of oil consumption in 2014, up from 13.1 million a decade earlier.

Surging oil prices between 2004 and 2014 brought an enormous influx of revenue for exporters, stimulating their economies and resulting in a surge in internal demand for everything from vehicles to electricity and construction.
Paradoxically, higher oil prices helped tighten the global oil market because they stimulated even more demand growth in oil-exporting economies.
The price-revenue-demand relationship is one of many positive feedback mechanisms operating in the oil market which have tended to amplify price swings and intensify the price cycle.
Once oil prices slumped, however, the mechanism shifted into reverse. Falling revenues caused oil exporting economies to slow and forced cutbacks in government, business and household spending.
Since the middle of 2014, domestic oil demand in the major oil exporting countries has levelled off or even started to fall (“Middle East economic slowdown will cut oil demand growth”, Reuters, Jan. 20 ).
Total oil consumption in the 15 major exporters actually declined by 90,000 bpd in 2015 and is likely to decline again in 2016.
The slump in oil exporting economies is a major reason why global economic growth and trade have been so sluggish in the last two years.

Lower oil prices have produced a negative shock for the global economy because the hit to investment and consumption in exporting countries is large and immediate while gains for consuming countries are smaller and take longer to materialise.
SLOW ADJUSTMENT
So far, the United States has been excluded from the analysis because it is both a larger oil producer and consumer, has been a limited exporter until recently, and has a large and diversified economy, unlike any other major oil exporter.

U.S. oil consumption declined by 1.6 million bpd between 2004 and 2014, mostly as a result of increased efficiency, while domestic production rose by around 4.5 million bpd, mostly thanks to shale.
In many ways, the United States was responsible for the end of the oil boom by reducing its own oil demand while boosting supply, resulting in an enormous net shift in the global oil balance.
The country is slated to play an outsized role in rebalancing, with shale production already down sharply, and oil consumption increasing for the first time since 2005 (excluding the post-recession rebound in 2010).
The other advanced economies in Europe and Asia account for a relatively small share of global consumption and are not dynamic enough to contribute much to rebalancing on either the demand or supply sides.
So rebalancing will rely on China, India and the United States in the early stages, with oil-exporting countries likely to accelerate the rebalancing later in the cycle.

Source: Reuters (Editing by David Evans)

Oil Steady After Biggest Gain in Three Weeks on Fuel Supply Drop

In Oil & Companies News 04/08/2016

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Oil traded near $41 a barrel after U.S. gasoline supplies fell the most since April, retreating from the highest seasonal level in at least two decades.
Futures were little changed in New York after advancing as much as 1.4 percent earlier. Prices climbed 3.3 percent on Wednesday, the most in three weeks. Inventories of the motor fuel slid by 3.26 million barrels last week, according to data from the Energy Information Administration. Crude output fell for the first time in four weeks, while stockpiles unexpectedly expanded. Refinery rates and crude imports rose.
Oil rebounded after tumbling more than 20 percent into a bear market, closing below $40 a barrel on Tuesday for the first time since April. Citigroup Inc. to Bank of America Merrill Lynch predicted the slump would be short-lived, while Societe Generale SA said the price correction would be limited due to a better balance between supply and demand.
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“For those focusing on gasoline, it was encouraging,” Tamas Varga, an analyst at PVM Oil Associates Ltd. in London, said of yesterday’s EIA report. “Inventories in this product fell surprisingly hard. But that does not change the fact the U.S. is flooded with oil.”
West Texas Intermediate for September delivery was at $40.90 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up 7 cents, at 9:04 a.m. London time. The contract climbed $1.32 to $40.83 on Wednesday, the biggest gain since July 12.
U.S. Stockpiles
Brent for October settlement was 8 cents lower at $43.02 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange after climbing as much as 1.3 percent earlier. Prices rose 3.1 percent to $43.10 a barrel on Wednesday. The global benchmark traded at a premium of $1.36 to WTI for October.

U.S. crude output decreased by 55,000 barrels a day to 8.46 million a day, the EIA reported Wednesday. Nationwide inventories expanded by 1.4 million barrels to 522.5 million, keeping supplies more than 100 million barrels above the five-year average. Stockpiles at Cushing, the delivery point for WTI and the nation’s biggest storage hub, fell the most in six weeks.
“We’re seeing rebalancing,” Scott Darling, regional head of oil and gas at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “We think in the near term, oil will be under pressure because demand is moderating.”
Oil-market news:
Hurricane Earl is forecast to strike Belize overnight Wednesday as a Category 1 storm before entering Mexico’s Bay of Campeche, where Petroleos Mexicanos operates offshore oil rigs and platforms.
Oil traders who specialize in purchasing cargoes from Mediterranean ports view the chances of an imminent resumption of shipments from two key Libyan terminals as almost zero, even after a deal was struck to reopen the facilities.
Iran approved a new oil contract model, taking the OPEC nation a step closer to welcoming foreign investment in its energy industry and boosting production even more into an oversupplied market.

Source: Bloomberg

Gold Drops for Second Day as Investors Count Down to Jobs Data

In Commodity News 04/08/2016

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Gold declined for a second day before the release of official U.S. jobs data that may confirm steady employment as signaled by Wednesday’s private ADP Research Institute report, and throw some light on the possible timing of an interest-rate increase.
Bullion for immediate delivery fell as much as 0.6 percent to $1,350 an ounce and traded at $1,352.30 at 2:37 p.m. in Singapore, according to Bloomberg generic pricing. The metal gained to $1,367.34 on Aug. 2, the highest intraday level since July 11.
Gold has rallied 27 percent this year as the Federal Reserve held back on further tightening in the U.S., and other central banks and governments push stimulus to boost growth. The Bank of England is set to cut rates to a record later Thursday, according to almost all economists in a Bloomberg survey. In the U.S., the ADP report showed that companies added179,000 jobs last month, beating estimates and boosting the dollar.
“Markets are currently expecting the non-farm payroll to show a 180,000 increase,” said Vyanne Lai, an economist at National Australia Bank Ltd., referring to data due Friday. “But if the actual result is stronger, say, 200,000 or more, market probability for a rate hike by the Fed in September is likely to increase, and in turn will weigh on gold.”
On Wednesday, Fed Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans said a rate increase could be warranted this year as the economy picks up steam, even though he’s still worried that inflation is too low. Investors see only 20 percent odds of a hike in September, according to prices of federal funds futures.
  • Holdings in gold-backed exchange-traded funds added 1.97 metric tons to 2,025.7 tons on Wednesday, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s the highest level since July 2013.
  • In China, bullion of 99.99 percent purity was 1.1 percent lower at 288.76 yuan a gram ($1,353.32 an ounce) on the Shanghai Gold Exchange.
  • On the Shanghai Futures Exchange, gold for December delivery declined 0.9 percent to 290.05 yuan a gram, while silver tumbled 2.4 percent to 4,459 yuan a kilogram.
  • Silver in London fell 1 percent to $20.2020 an ounce.
  • Platinum lost 0.8 percent and palladium dropped 0.6 percent.
Source: Bloomberg