Saudi Arabia crude exports fall to 7.276m bpd in July

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia’s crude oil exports in July fell to 7.276 million barrels per day from 7.365 million bpd in June, official data showed.

Monthly export figures are provided by Riyadh and other members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI), which published them on its website.
OPEC member Kuwait said recently that it would take time for the oil market to balance itself, indicating the group would continue defending market share despite production cuts to bolster prices.
Other OPEC sources said they expect oil to rise no more than $5 a barrel per year to reach $80 by 2020.
Oil prices fell on Friday, with US crude down about 3 percent, as investors and traders waited to see if the US oil rig count will drop further while OPEC members indicated they would do little to slash output.
Falling share prices on Wall Street, which have provided guidance to oil of late, also pressured crude futures, along with reduced political tensions in the Middle East from US-Russia talks on Syria.
The dollar rebounded to keep a lid on oil and other commodities, after Thursday’s decision by the Federal Reserve to keep US interest rates unchanged drove the currency to a three-week low earlier.
That left attention largely on oil services firm Baker Hughes’s weekly US oil rigs report due at 1700 GMT. US oil drillers have cut rigs over the past two weeks, a sign that renewed price declines since July may be slowing some from returning to the well pad in a bigger way.
“With US output shifts still very much under the microscope, today’s oil rig counts could be a key determinant as to how the complex finishes this week,” said Jim Ritterbusch, analyst at Ritterbusch & Associates, an oil markets advisory in North Wabash, Chicago.
“We expect another decline but one downsized from recent double digit decreases,” he added.
US crude futures were down $1.20, or 2.6 percent, at $45.70 a barrel on Friday.
Brent was off by 60 cents, or 1.2 percent, at $48.48. Despite that, Brent was still headed for its first modest weekly gain in three weeks.
Iran’s deputy oil minister Rokneddin Javadi reiterated Iran’s plans to regain its oil production share once nuclear-related sanctions are removed against Tehran, adding that new oil contracts would be unveiled in coming weeks.
Russia was the only major producer to say on Friday it was likely to cut production at below $40 a barrel.