Thursday 10 March 2016

Oil Price Still Crashing Despite OPEC Seeking Higher Anchor Price


Oil prices are crashing again Tuesday after a short-lived spike on Monday. Crude oil fell by 1.19 percent by 7 a.m. GMT to around $37.50 a barrel, while Brent crude, the European benchmark, fell by 1.22% to hover just above $40 a barrel. If this price trend continues, it will eradicate the 3.5% gains that oil experienced on Monday.


Oil started to recover two weeks ago, with some analysts saying the commodity had finally bottomed out after a near-constant 18-month slide. Oil prices were in the triple digits in the summer of 2014 but are now about 60% lower because of a glut of oversupply by the OPEC cartel of oil-producing countries.


OPEC’s bid to push Western counterparts out of business seems to be working, with Juan Prada from Barclays writing in a note on Tuesday: “Data showed that active US oil rigs fell last week to the lowest level since December 2009. Sentiment was further supported by expectations of policy stimulus in China.”


But after initial concern that OPEC’s pledge to freeze its production wouldn’t make a difference — because of oil-rich countries such as Iran starting to pump huge amounts of oil — the oil price was given a boost by improving market sentiment.

OPEC also said it would be seeking a higher anchor price for oil. The slide in oil prices, however, supports some analysts’ view that the rally is and will be short-lived. Norbert Ruecker, the head of commodities research at the Swiss private bank Julius Baer, said this week that there would be no “long-term recovery” in the price of oil:

 Shale’s cost deflation, Iran’s return, and Mexico’s market opening suggest that supplies remain ample for longer, overshadowing the industry’s investment cuts for the time being. Supply glut fears have taken a backseat as of late with the oil market’s focus shifting from pessimism over ample inventories to optimism over declining US production. We still believe that oil prices experience a short-term bounce but no long-term recovery but see further upside in the near term.

SOURCE:nigeriamasterweb

Abraham Attah Reportedly Moving to USA & Will Attend School Under a Netflix Scholarship

'Beasts of No Nation'
"Beasts of No Nation" star Abraham Attah is apparently moving to the USA (from Ghana), where, according to Nigeria's EbonyLife TV network, he'll attend school thanks to a scholarship from Netflix - the company released "Beasts of No Nation" as you'll recall, hence the connection.
Attah received much deserved acclaim for his performance in the film, including the Best Actor trophy at the 2016 Spirit Awards just a couple of weeks ago. 
I assume his move to the USA will also mean more potential acting work for the young thespian. As of today, he isn't attached to any other film or TV series; last year, he filmed a short film titled "Out of the Village," which was directed by Jonathan Stein, and counts "X-Men" director Bryan Singer as one of its producers. The 16-minute film that follows a brother and his sister during the Ebola outbreak (set in an "unnamed West African village" of course), is currently touring the international film festival circuit. 
The film, which was shot in Ghana raised over $20,000 via a Kickstarter campaign last year. I'm sure Attah's newfound fame will help draw attention to it wherever it screens.