Business World

US oil surges as stock draw adds to supply concerns

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NEW YORK — US oil futures surged nearly two percent on Wednesday as they were bolstered by a fifth weekly crude inventory drawdown and strong domestic gasoline demand amid ongoing global supply concerns over US sanctions on Iran that come into force in November.

US crude inventorie­s fell 2.1 million barrels last week to 394.1 million barrels, the lowest level since February 2015, government data showed. Gasoline stocks fell 1.7 million barrels versus forecasts for a 100,000-barrel drop.

“It was a squarely bullish report,” said John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital Management in New York. “The summer-like demand from drivers is proving unrelentin­g.”

Gasoline consumptio­n usually picks up in the summer and wanes in autumn, but demand remained strong in the latest week, estimated at 9.5 million barrels per day.

US crude futures settled up $1.27 or 1.8% at $71.12 a barrel.

Brent futures also rose but the gains were more muted, as the global benchmark ended 37 cents or 0.5% higher at $79.40 a barrel.

In the previous session, Brent rose 1.3% on a media report that Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, was comfortabl­e with prices above $80, indicating the producer would not try to increase output to drive prices lower. Reuters reported on Sept. 5 that Saudi Arabia wanted oil to stay between $70 and $80 to keep a balance between maximizing revenue and keeping a lid on prices until US congressio­nal elections.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other producers like Russia meet on Sept. 23 in Algeria to discuss how to allocate supply increases within their quota framework to offset the loss of Iranian supply.

US sanctions affecting Iran’s oil exports come into force on Nov. 4 and many buyers have already scaled back Iranian purchases. —

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