The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Oil set for first weekly gain since July as US refiners return

-

LONDON: Oil headed for the first weekly gain since July as Gulf Coast refiners ramp up crude processing after disruption­s from Hurricane Harvey.

Futures were little changed in New York, up 3.7% for the week. Only about 8% of US refining capacity remains shut following the storm, which halted about 25% after it first made landfall two weeks ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. American crude stockpiles rose by 4.58 mil- lion barrels last week, the first gain since June.

While refineries, pipelines and offshore platforms resume operations after Harvey, another Atlantic hurricane, known as Irma, is approachin­g the US coast and is set to hit Florida tomorrow.

Imports into the Gulf Coast region last week fell to the lowest in records going back to 1990, and nationwide crude output fell below 9 million barrels a day for the first time since February.

“When refineries gave signals that damage was not too great and restarts were on the table, then crude rose back up and then continued higher,” said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commoditie­s analyst at SEB AB in Oslo.

West Texas Intermedia­te for October delivery was at US$49.08 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 1 cent, at 1:36pm in London yesterday. Total volume traded was about 13% below the 100-day average. Prices lost 7 cents to close at US$49.09 on Thursday.

Brent for November settlement was up 27 cents at US$54.76 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. Prices gained 29 cents, or 0.5%, to US$54.49 on Thursday and are 3.8% higher this week. The global benchmark traded at a premium of US$5.23 to November WTI.

Gulf Coast imports dropped by 41% last week to 1.48 million barrels a day, the lowest volume since at least January 1990, according to a report from the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion on Thursday. Nationwide crude output slid by 749,000 barrels a day to 8.78 million a day.

“While the fear last week was for reduced oil processing by refineries due to hurricane Harvey, the coin has now flipped,” said Schieldrop. “Now the concern is that this may be a heavy hurricane season with the risk of substantia­l disruption­s to crude oil production in the Gulf of Mexico.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia