Business World

Oil hits two-month high on tighter US market

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SINGAPORE — Oil prices hit a two-month high on Monday, lifted by a tightening US crude market and the threat of sanctions against the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) member Venezuela.

Brent crude futures were at $52.82 per barrel at 0443 GMT on Monday, up 30 cents or 0.60%. Prices hit $52.90 per barrel earlier in the day, their highest since May 25.

US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) futures were up 16 cents, or 0.30%, at $49.87 per barrel, and the entire WTI curve is close to moving back over $50 per barrel, with only September and October a notch below that level.

The price rises put both crude benchmarks on track for a sixth consecutiv­e session of gains.

Prices have risen around 10% since the last meeting of leading members by OPEC and other major producers, including Russia, when the group discussed measures to further tighten oil markets.

“US inventorie­s are showing massive drawdowns, Saudi Arabia seems intent on playing its role as the world’s swing producer (and) impending sanctions on Venezuela by the US will almost certainly be oil price- supportive,” said Jeffrey Halley, analyst at futures brokerage OANDA.

The United States is considerin­g imposing sanctions on Venezuela’s vital oil sector in response to Sunday’s election of a constituti­onal super- body that Washington has denounced as a “sham” vote.

But traders said the biggest price supporter was currently a tightening US oil market.

“Strong increases in the price of oil… (were) fueled in large part by the substantia­l drawdowns in US inventorie­s over the past several weeks,” said William O’Loughlin, analyst at Rivkin Securities.

“A continuati­on of this trend could indicate the oil market is rebalancin­g thanks to the production cuts by OPEC and Russia.”

After rising by more than 10% since mid- 2016, US oil production dipped by 0.20% to 9.41 million barrels per day in the week to July 21.

US crude inventorie­s have fallen by 10% from their March peaks to 483.40 million barrels. Drilling for new US production is also slowing, with just 10 rigs added in July, the fewest since May 2016. The tighter market was also visible in the price curve, which shows backwardat­ion in the front end.

Backwardat­ion is a market condition in which prices for immediate delivery of a product are higher than those later on.

Brent prices for delivery in September are currently around 35 cents above those for October. —

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