The Sun (Malaysia)

Oil edges up towards US$42 aided by better risk appetite

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LONDON: Oil edged up to around US$42 (RM174.30) a barrel yesterday supported by rising investor risk appetite and a report that US fuel inventorie­s fell, although rising crude supply and concern of stalling demand capped gains.

European equities rose after better-than-expected German manufactur­ing data, giving oil a boost. The American Petroleum Institute said US inventorie­s of gasoline and distillate fuel dropped, while those of crude rose.

“The rebound in risk appetite today is lifting oil prices a little,” said Craig Erlam, analyst at broker OANDA. “But it already faces stiff resistance.”

Brent crude was up 8 cents, or 0.2%, at US$41.80 at 1155 GMT, reversing an earlier drop. US West Texas Intermedia­te crude was up 9 cents at US$39.89. Both contracts fell more than 4% on Monday, though they rose on Tuesday.

In focus at 1430 GMT will be the official U.S. inventory numbers from the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion to see if they confirm the report from the API, an industry group.

Surging Covid-19 infections in countries including India, France and Spain and new restrictio­ns in Britain have renewed worries about demand, just as more supply may come from Libya. In the United States, the death toll has passed 200,000.

“Oil prices are still faring comparativ­ely well today given all the headwinds they are facing – a firm U.S. dollar, concerns about demand, rising supply,” said Carsten Fritsch of Commerzban­k.

Oil collapsed as the pandemic decimated demand, with Brent falling below US$16 in April. A record output cut by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies, known as Opec+, has helped revive prices.

Opec faces a new challenge in that Libya, an Opec member exempt from the supply cut, is aiming to boost supply. Still, previous recoveries have not lasted. – Reuters

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