Khaleej Times

Oil recovers on US stock drawdown

- Osamu Tsukimori

tokyo — Oil prices rose on Wednesday as industry data showed a larger-than-expected drawdown in US crude stockpiles, while expectatio­ns for an extended shutdown of a major North Sea crude pipeline also continued to bolster markets.

Brent crude was up 69 cents, or 1.1 per cent, at $64.03 a barrel by 0743 GMT. It had settled down $1.35, or 2.1 per cent, on Tuesday on a wave of profit-taking after news of a key North Sea pipeline shutdown helped send the global benchmark above $65 for the first time since mid-2015.

US West Texas Intermedia­te crude was up 45 cents, or 0.8 per cent, at $57.59 a barrel.

Britain’s biggest pipeline from its barrels was the decline in crude stocks in the us last week North Sea oil and gas fields is likely to be shut for several weeks for repairs, its operator said on Tuesday.

The pipeline, which carries about 450,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Forties crude, was shut after cracks were found. It has particular significan­ce to global markets because Forties is the largest out of the five crude oil streams that underpin the dated Brent benchmark.

A number of producers, including BP and Royal Dutch Shell, said they had closed down oil fields in response.

“Four weeks is much longer than most projection­s,” said Tomomichi Akuta, senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Research and Consulting in Tokyo. “The pipeline incident came just when the markets are tightening on coordinate­d production cuts.”

Industry group the American Petroleum Institute said crude stocks in the US fell by 7.4 million barrels last week. That is almost twice the decline of analysts’ expectatio­ns for a drop of 3.8 million barrels.

Gasoline stocks rose by 2.3 million barrels, compared with analysts’ expectatio­ns in a Reuters poll for a 2.5 million-barrel gain. Distillate fuels stockpiles, which include diesel and heating oil, rose by 1.5 million barrels, compared with expectatio­ns for a 902,000-barrel gain. — Reuters

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