Oil prices mixed after King Abdullah's death

The US benchmark futures contract, West Texas Intermediate for delivery in March, fell 72 cents to $45.59 a barrel, a new, nearly six-year low.

In London, Brent North Sea crude for March settled at $48.79 a barrel, up 27 cents from Thursday’s closing level.

Saudi Arabia’s powerful King Abdullah, aged about 90, died early Friday and the royal family moved swiftly to show continuity in the country’s power structure and policies.

Abdullah’s half-brother, Crown Prince Salman, was named the new king and, in his first public statement, vowed to “remain, with God’s strength, attached to the straight path that this state has walked since its establishment.”

As the top producer in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Saudi Arabia has been the driving force behind the cartel’s refusal to slash output to support oil prices, despite their rapid decline. Crude oil has lost about 60 percent of its value since June.

Tim Evans of Citi Futures noted that King Salman had affirmed that Saudi Arabian foreign and energy policy would be unchanged, with Ali Al-Naimi remaining energy minister.

Fatih Birol, the chief economist of the International Energy Agency, said he did not foresee major policy shifts.

“I do not expect any significant change in the oil policy of Saudi Arabia and I expect and hope that they will continue to be a stabilization factor in the oil markets,” Birol told AFP on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

“I hope they will continue to contribute to the stability of the oil markets… especially in these days where we are going through difficult days,” he added.

Saudi Arabia has rejected calls from some members of the 12-nation OPEC to slash output, preferring instead to lower prices in a bid to gain market share.

Phil Flynn of Price Futures Group said that Brent, the European benchmark, had risen on increased turmoil in oil-producer Yemen, where the president resigned Thursday amid a deadly standoff with Shiite militia controlling the capital.

Agence France-Presse

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