Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Oil hits US $71 for first time since 2014 on tighter supply and weak dollar

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Oil hit US $71 a barrel yesterday for the first time since 2014, supported by OPECLED supply curbs, a recordbrea­king run of declines in U.S. crude inventorie­s and a weaker U.S. dollar.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies including Russia began to curb supplies in 2017. An involuntar­y drop in Venezuela’s output in recent months has deepened the impact of the curbs.

Brent crude, the internatio­nal oil benchmark, hit US $71.20 a barrel - the highest since early December 2014. At 0956 GMT, Brent eased to US $70.81, still up 28 cents.

U.S. crude climbed to US $66.44, also the highest since early December 2014, before dipping to US $66.11, up 50 cents.

“The continuous fall in U.S. oil inventorie­s and the prolonged weakness in the U.S. dollar have done the trick,” said Tamas Varga of broker PVM, referring to oil hitting a new high.

The supply cuts led by OPEC and Russia started a year ago and are aimed at getting rid of excess supply that had weighed on prices. They are set to last throughout 2018.

In a further sign the glut is clearing, U.S. crude inventorie­s fell for a record 10th straight week to the lowest since February 2015, official figures showed on Wednesday.

Also supporting oil, the U.S. dollar hit its lowest since December 2014 against a basket of other currencies.

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