Business World

Oil rallies after record 10th straight fall in US stock

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NEW YORK — Oil prices rallied on heavy volume on Wednesday, boosted by a record 10th straight weekly decline in US crude inventorie­s, though reduced refining activity and rising production signaled US stocks could rise in coming weeks.

US crude inventorie­s fell by 1.10 million barrels last week, short of expectatio­ns, but the 10-week streak of declines represents a record, according to US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA) data going back to 1982. At 411.60 million barrels, stocks are at their lowest since February 2015.

The steady draw has triggered record buying by speculator­s, pushing oil benchmarks to threeyear highs.

US West Texas Intermedia­te futures settled up $ 1.14, or 1.80%, to $ 65.80. Brent futures gained 57 cents to $70.53 a barrel. Both benchmarks were at their highest since December 2014.

More than 830,000 US crude contracts changed hands, far exceeding the daily average of 618,000 contracts over the last 10 months.

Also supporting oil prices was a 0.70% drop in the US dollar after Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s comments that a weaker currency was positive for American trade. A weaker dollar makes greenback- denominate­d commoditie­s less expensive for investors using other currencies.

US crude production rose to 9.90 million barrels per day last week, nearing the all-time record of 10.04 million barrels per day set in 1970, the EIA data showed.

Stockpiles continued to decline at the storage hub of Cushing, Oklahoma, falling to 39.20 million barrels, lowest since January 2015. Reduced flows from the Keystone pipeline from Canada helped drain supply there, along with further outflows from the new Diamond Pipeline.

The draw in inventorie­s helped to narrow Brent’s premium over US crude to $4.91. In late December, that spread touched $7 a barrel, which spurred US exports and reduced imports. “The draws in Cushing are driving that, because Cushing is draining like a cheap canoe,” said Phil Flynn, analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago.

Declining inventorie­s spurred more buying in the front-month crude contract. The spread between the March and April contract widened to 26 cents, highest in three years. This reflected expectatio­ns that companies will continue to sell barrels at the current higher price.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, Khalid al- Falih, Saudi Arabia’s energy minister, said he is not concerned about the threat of US production, citing declining output from Venezuela and Mexico. US refining capacity use declined by 2.10 percentage points as maintenanc­e season began, though gasoline and diesel demand still exceeded year-ago levels, the EIA said.

Money managers hold more bullish positions in crude futures and options than at any time on record, and some investors now appear to be seeking protection against a possible fall in prices. —

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