* Kuwait says OPEC discussing output increase
* Brent premium over WTI falls below $9 from $17 last week
* Coming up: API oil data at 4:30 p.m. EST (2130 GMT)
(Updates with settlement prices, additional detail)
By Robert Gibbons
NEW YORK, March 8 (Reuters) - Oil prices slipped on
Tuesday, with Brent falling nearly 2 percent, after Kuwait's
oil minister said OPEC was considering a production boost as
war-torn Libya's output remained disrupted and the region's
unrest fueled concerns about more supplies being cut off.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has
kept its official policy steady for more than two years, but
analysts have said output has been informally rising for months
and Saudi Arabia has offered to help make up for Libya's shut
output, estimated at about 1 million barrels per day of its
normal 1.6 million bpd. []
Brent crude for April delivery <LCOc1> fell $1.98 to settle
at $113.06 a barrel, having fallen as low as $112.13.
U.S. crude futures for April delivery <CLc1> fell 42 cents
to settle at $105.02 a barrel, above an early $103.33 low.
Brent's premium to the U.S. benchmark West Texas
Intermediate crude <CL-LCO1=R> fell $1.61 to $8.14 a barrel at
3:17 p.m. EST (2017 GMT), down from a peak of more than $17
last week. []
"We are in consultations about a potential output
increase," Kuwait's Sheikh Ahmad al-Abdullah al-Sabah told
reporters. But he added that the group had taken no decision
yet to produce above existing output targets. []
Saudi oil minister Ali Al-Naimi and others in OPEC said
world oil markets were sufficiently supplied. Naimi said the
kingdom held 3.5 million bpd of spare production capacity to
meet any shortages. []
While acknowledging the output discussions, Algeria's oil
minister said he sees no physical deficits in oil markets and
Iran's OPEC governor downplayed the discussions and said there
was no need for an output boost as consumer worries over supply
were mostly "psychological." []
Investment bank Goldman Sachs raised its oil price forecast
and said it believed Saudi Arabia already had used up more of
its surplus capacity than is widely thought. []
U.S. crude prices will average $102 a barrel in 2011
because of the unrest in North Africa and the Middle East, the
U.S. Energy Information Administration said, raising the
forecast by $9 from its February outlook. []
[]
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FACTBOX on emergency oil stockpiles: []
Graphics on U.S. strategic oil reserve, U.S. and other IEA
nations' reserves: http://link.reuters.com/cah48r
Graphics showing:
Middle East unrest http://r.reuters.com/nym77r
Oil price shocks http://r.reuters.com/qes28r
Those most reliant on oil http://r.reuters.com/dux28r
OECD commercial oil stocks http://link.reuters.com/qyg48r
Brent and WTI open interest http://r.reuters.com/cag48r
Graphic of U.S. oil stocks: http://r.reuters.com/sup48r
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BATTLE FOR LIBYA
Libyan government forces attacked rebels with rockets,
tanks and warplanes on western and eastern fronts, intensifying
their offensive to crush the revolt against Muammar Gaddafi.
[]
U.S. President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister
David Cameron conferred by telephone and agreed "to press
forward with planning, including at NATO, on the full spectrum
of possible responses," including a no-fly zone, the White
House said in a statement. []
"The market is now waiting for the next piece of news to
unfold," said Harry Tchilinguirian, head of commodity markets
strategy at BNP Paribas, who said $2 moves were not surprising
in such a volatile market.
"A turn for the worse for the market would be oil
infrastructure being hit as a result of the fighting. The
demise of the current regime or a more forceful statement from
OPEC followed by an increase in production would be significant
too."
U.S. OIL INVENTORY REPORTS
A Reuters analyst survey on Tuesday yielded a forecast for
crude stocks to be up slightly, with distillate and gasoline
stocks expected to have fallen last week. []
The industry group American Petroleum Institute will issue
its weekly oil inventory report at 4:30 p.m. EST (2130 GMT) on
Tuesday. The EIA's report of government data follows on
Wednesday, at 10:30 a.m. EST (1530 GMT).
(Additional reporting by Nia Williams and Christopher Johnson
in London and Alejandro Barbajosa in Singapore; Editing by
Walter Bagley)