Business World

Oil up 1% on volatile trade, posts weekly gain of 5%

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NEW YORK — Oil rose 1% on Friday, boosted as US crude producers added only two rigs in the latest week and on signs of increased Chinese demand, but trading was volatile as global supply remained strong.

Brent crude futures, the internatio­nal benchmark for oil, settled up 49 cents, or about 1%, at $48.91 per barrel.

US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude futures settled up 46 cents, or 1%, at $46.54 per barrel.

US crude rose more than 5.20% for the week while Brent rose more than 4.70%.

“I think the big driver is inventory numbers,” said Stewart Glickman, head of energy research at CFRA Research in New York, “We’ve finally broken below 500 million barrels, I feel like it’s a psychologi­cal barrier.”

US crude inventorie­s fell 7.60 million barrels last week, its biggest weekly plunge in 10 months, the US Energy Infor- mation Administra­tion said on Wednesday.

And while US energy firms added oil rigs for a second week in a row according to Friday data from Baker Hughes, the pace of additions has slowed to its lowest this year.

Oil production in North Dakota fell 10,000 barrels per day in May.

Still, oil stocks remained comfortabl­y above the five-year average, and prices were more than 15% below their 2017 highs.

Output cuts from producing countries coordinate­d by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) have been stymied by rising output from Libya and Nigeria, which are exempt. June compliance among other members also fell to just 78%, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA).

Kuwait’s OPEC governor told Reuters in an interview that it would be premature to cap Nigerian and Libyan oil production.

Money managers raised their net long US crude futures and options positions in the week to July 11, the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission said on Friday.

Brent and WTI prices were roughly 5% above the week’s lows, aided by reports of accelerati­ng demand growth from the IEA, crude oil import growth in China and falling crude stocks in the United States.

China’s crude oil imports over the first six months of 2017 were 13.80% above the year-ago period, customs data showed. —

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