Oil going up. OPEC+ Shows Confidence in Economic Recovery With Oil-Supply Hike Salma El Wardany, Javier Blas, Dina Khrennikova and Grant Smith Thu, April 1, 2021, 12:41 PM4 min read CL=F 0.00% 2/ 2 OPEC+ Shows Confidence in Economic Recovery With Oil-Supply Hike (Bloomberg) -- OPEC+ expressed growing confidence in the global economic recovery by agreeing to increase oil production gradually in the coming months. Before Thursdays meeting, the cartel had been widely expected to maintain its cautious stance by rolling over the current supply cuts, just as it did last month. Yet Saudi Arabia and its allies showed they are more convinced now that fuel demand is on a firmer footing after a yearlong beating from the coronavirus. As countries like the U.S. rapidly expand their vaccination programs, there are growing signals that the oil market is healing. Last week, American refiners processed the most crude since the pandemic started as they prepared for a surge in driving and flying. Although European oil consumption is weak as France, Germany and Italy extend or impose new lockdowns, demand indicators from China remain strong. The global seven-day average of commercial flights taking off each day hit on a post-pandemic high of 77,708 on Wednesday, according to data from Flightradar24. Even in those sectors that were badly hit such as airline travel, there are signs of meaningful improvement, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said at the opening session of the OPEC+ videoconference. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies will add more than 2 million barrels a day to world oil supplies from May to July. That will restore about a quarter of the crude they are still withholding after making deep cuts a year ago in response to the pandemic. With oil prices firmly above $60 a barrel, the group has been under pressure to open the taps. Other commodity costs have also been soaring, leaving central banks from the U.S. to China grappling with the risk of higher inflation just as their governments are pouring trillions of dollars into fiscal stimulus. Major consumers including America and India have been calling on OPEC+ to keep prices under control. U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm phoned her Saudi counterpart on the eve of the cartels meeting to highlight the importance of affordable energy. Prince Abdulaziz told reporters that they didnt discuss the oil market. The 23-nation coalition will boost output by 350,000 barrels a day in May, add the same volume again in June and increase by 450,000 barrels a day in July, Prince Abdulaziz told reporters after the meeting. On top of that, Saudi Arabia will roll back its voluntary extra 1 million barrel-a day cut, adding 250,000 barrels a day in May, 350,000 in June and 400,000 in July, he said. OPEC+ agreed today to cautiously increase production quotas, Ann-Louise Hittle, Wood Mackenzie Ltd.s vice president of macro oils, said in a note. The agreement is supportive of oil prices, yet should also help avoid a sharp spike upward as oil demand picks up. Brent crude rose after the decision, climbing 3.2% to $64.75 a barrel in London. Testing Times The Saudi minister said OPEC+ was now testing the market, and has the opportunity to reverse course if necessary at its next meeting on April 28. As the worlds largest crude exporter, the kingdom has an unrivaled overview of the health of the global economy. Its state-owned company, Aramco, has visibility of oil demand two months in advance -- the time period in which it informally receives orders from global refiners. So the decision to increase production indicates that Riyadh is seeing sufficient demand for the supplies it will restore in May and June. Story continues RECOMMENDED STORIES Bloomberg Volcanoes and Hurricanes Become Destinations for Ethical Money 15h ago Reuters US STOCKS-S&P 500 rides Microsoft, Amazon to record close above 4,000 2d ago Associated Press Biden affirms support for Ukraine in first call to leader 1d ago Reuters Tesla's first-quarter deliveries break previous record, beat expectations 1d ago Associated Press Hurricane Center report details $2.9 billion cost from Delta 6h ago Associated Press US agency opens 2 safety probes of Volkswagen, Audi vehicles 1d ago LA Times Biden's infrastructure bill will face uphill battle in Congress 2d ago Reuters Dollar, U.S. Treasuries edge higher on strong U.S. labor report 2d ago Benzinga ARKX Isn't The First Space ETF: Here's How The Others Have Performed 2d ago MORE FROM BLOOMBERG Bloomberg Suez Canal Ship Backlog Cleared After Freeing of Ever Given 2h ago Bloomberg Europes World-Beating Equity Rally Thrives Where Others Falter 15h ago Bloomberg Volcanoes and Hurricanes Become Destinations for Ethical Money 15h ago Bloomberg A $27 Trillion Challenge Looms as Yen Libor Shift Nears 15h ago