Business World

Oil up almost 2% on weaker dollar, short covering

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NEW YORK — Oil prices rose nearly 2% and hit a one-week high on Tuesday, boosted by a weaker dollar, short covering and expectatio­ns that crude inventorie­s in the United States may decline for a third consecutiv­e week.

It was the fourth straight session of gains for oil, which also got some support after the chief executive of US shale oil producer Pioneer Natural Resources Co. said Saudi Arabia likely will move to boost oil prices to prop up its finances. Prices pared gains after hours when an industry group reported an unexpected rise in US crude inventorie­s.

With the end of the quarter approachin­g, brokers said investors were covering short positions.

Brent crude futures, the internatio­nal benchmark for oil prices, gained 82 cents, or 1.79%, to settle at $ 46.65 per barrel. US crude futures ended the session up 86 cents, or about 1.98%, at $44.24 per barrel.

Brent touched a one-week high of $47.06, while US crude hit its highest since June 19 at $44.44.

“I think in the market, over the last four weeks or so, every news item has been uniformly bearish, even the technical situation has been bearish and a lot of the entrenched bulls were really throwing in the towel,” said Andrew Lebow, senior partner at Commodity Research Group in Darien, Connecticu­t.

“The downside momentum was clear and today it just got to a level where it’s been arrested for the time being.”

After settlement, American Petroleum Institute data showed US crude inventorie­s rose 851,000 barrels in the week to June 23 to 509.5 million. Analysts had forecast a decline of 2.60 million barrels.

The dollar fell more than 1% against a basket of currencies.

Commerzban­k said in a research note that long positions in Brent on ICE are “at their lowest level in a year and a half,” while short positions “have soared to a new record high, having increased more than four-fold since the beginning of the year.”

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other producing nations have sought to reduce a global crude glut with production cuts. Yet global crude inventorie­s have not fallen, as the United States and other countries have boosted output.

Ian Taylor, head of the world’s largest independen­t oil trader Vitol, told Reuters Brent prices would stay in a range of $40-$55 a barrel for the next few quarters.

OPEC delegates said the cartel will not rush more output cuts or end the exemptions some members enjoy, though a meeting in Russia next month is likely to consider further steps. —

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