Business World

Oil rides on gasoline demand, OPEC compliance

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NEW YORK — Oil prices rebounded from earlier losses to end higher on Wednesday, after the US Energy department said oil inventorie­s rose for the first time in nearly three months, but was offset by strong demand for gasoline and distillate products and news that the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) maintained heavy supply cuts in January.

Crude oil futures ended higher for the fifth straight month, with US futures gaining 7.70% in January, the best month for the contract since September.

OPEC and other producers including Russia continued their strong adherence to supply cuts, according to a Reuters survey.

OPEC members cut output by 1.80 million barrels per day ( bpd) until through the end of 2018, and a Reuters survey on Wednesday showed the members of the cartel achieved a 138% supply cut.

Overall OPEC output rose in January from an eight- month low, however, and one reason for the high compliance was a sharp fall in Venezuela due to an economic crisis there.

US crude futures settled up 23 cents to $ 64.73 a barrel, up 0.40%, after hitting a low of $63.92 shortly after the release. Brent crude rose three cents to $69.05 a barrel.

US oil inventorie­s rose by 6.80 million barrels in the week to Jan. 26, after 10 straight weeks of declines, which had dropped supply to its lowest levels since early 2015. The increase far exceeded expectatio­ns for a rise of 126,000 barrels. Analysts noted that refiners have been cutting activity while US crude production has kept rising.

Oil prices slipped immediatel­y after the news, but rebounded on the back of the surprising two million-barrel drawdown in gasoline stocks, suggesting demand for products may be enough to limit seasonal inventory buildup.

“Lower gasoline inventorie­s, combined with gasoline demand which is strong to start the year, bodes well for crude oil prices going forward,” said Rob Thummel, portfolio manager at Tortoise in Leawood, Kansas. “The dollar is weakening and that is also a positive for oil prices.”

March US gasoline futures rose 1.30% to $1.8952 a gallon.

“If this week’s drop is due to weather- related, unplanned incidents it may not yet herald the onset of turnaround season. However, those days are rapidly approachin­g,” said David Thompson, executive vice-president at energy- focused commoditie­s broker Powerhouse.

The US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion said production rose to 9.92 million bpd, close to the country’s record output of 10.04 million bpd set in 1970. Production is expected to hit 11 million bpd by 2019. Encouraged by higher crude prices, energy companies added 12 oil rigs last week, the biggest weekly increase since March. —

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