Oil futures rose following remarks from Russian President Vladimir Putin, who said he believed Russia and other producing nations should freeze output to stabilise long-suffering oil prices. (AFP/Philippe Huguen) |
The statements ran counter to views attributed the day before to Russia's oil minister which appeared to cast doubt on the need for any production freeze. Putin and Alexander Novak, the energy minister, were also quoted Friday as saying that Russian production would increase this year.
In New York, a barrel of West Texas Intermediate for October delivery rose US$1.28 to close at US$44.44. North Sea Brent, also for October delivery, gained US$1.38, settling at US$46.83 per barrel on the Intercontinental Exchange in London.
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is scheduled to convene late this month in Algeria and oil prices have fluctuated on speculation that the cartel could agree to limit supply.
In an interview with Bloomberg published on Friday, Putin said he believed Russia and OPEC, which together produce half the world's oil, should agree to freeze production and that any disagreement with Iran over the issue could be overcome.
Iran has pledged to increase its production to pre-sanctions levels of four million barrels per day.
"From the viewpoint of economic sense and logic, then it would be correct to find some sort of compromise," Putin told Bloomberg. "I am confident that everyone understands that."
Efforts to reach a similar agreement collapsed in April when top producer Saudi Arabia balked at Iran's insistence on returning to prior output levels.
Jason Schenker of Prestige Economics told AFP that, after losses earlier in the week, the dollar's fluctuations on currency markets had helped oil prices rise. "Next week we are going to see it move lower," he said of the dollar.
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