Oil has fallen by more than 10 percent from a record high of $100.09 a barrel hit early this month, easing some of the pressure on OPEC to raise supplies, analysts said.
Bodman told reporters in Abu Dhabi there were short-term concerns about the performance of the U.S. economy and he was hopeful Riyadh would steer a decision to increase oil supplies at OPEC's meeting on February 1 in Vienna.
"I continue to believe in my earlier statement that we are hopeful they will increase supplies," he said. "I am of the view that there needs to be increased supply in order to call the markets of the world well supplied with oil."
Bodman, who met the Saudi oil minister at the weekend, said the United States expected oil inventories to drop in the first half of 2008 but the Saudis held "different views".
The United Arab Emirates Oil Minister Mohammed al-Hamli said OPEC would examine all options when its ministers meet.
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