An energy installation on a property leased to Devon Energy Production Company by the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City is seen near Guthrie, Oklahoma, September 15, 2015. Oil investors are paying more to bet on a rise in the price of crude than on a decline for the first time in six weeks, as they prepare for the possibility of a surprise from OPEC, which is due to release its supply policy decision on Friday. Hedge funds have cut bullish bets on crude oil to their lowest in five years, with gloom deepening over the global economy’s ability to grow fast enough to absorb the world’s excess supply. [CFTC/] A “no cut” from OPEC is comfortably built into the current oil price, which has halved this year to around $45 a barrel, given Saudi Arabia’s financial ability to withstand sub-$50 crude and little likelihood of major non-OPEC producers, such […]