The Sun (Malaysia)

Oil near 2-month highs

> Buoyed by news of producers’ meeting next week, US sanctions threat against Venezuela

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LONDON: Oil was flat near two-month highs yesterday, putting July on track to become the strongest month so far this year, as news of a producers’ meeting next week added to bullish sentiment driven by the threat of US sanctions against Opec member Venezuela.

Investors also eyed a tightening US market after heavy inventory falls and slower new oil rig additions last week.

“Sentiment in the oil market became very bullish after Opec said it will meet with partners in Abu Dhabi next week to discuss compliance,” said Frank Schallenbe­rger, head of commodity research at LBBW.

Some Opec and non-Opec members will meet on Aug 7-8 in Abu Dhabi to assess how the group can increase compliance with production cuts that began on Jan 1.

Benchmark Brent crude traded at US$52.47 (RM224.57) a barrel at 1332 GMT, down 5 cents from Friday’s close. Brent earlier hit US$52.92 a barrel, its highest since May 25.

US light crude oil traded briefly above US$50 per barrel for the first time in two months before easing back to around US$49.53 a barrel.

Hedge funds and money managers have raised bullish bets on US crude oil to their highest in three months, US data showed.

The US is considerin­g imposing sanctions on Venezuela’s oil sector in response to Sunday’s election of a constituti­onal super-body, which Washington has denounced as a “sham” vote.

In Europe, a production outage at Shell’s 404,000 barrel-per-day Pernis refinery in the Netherland­s following a fire sent benchmark European diesel margins, which reflect the profit made from refining crude oil into the road fuel, to their highest since November 2015 at US$14.60 a barrel.

US production has hampered efforts to rebalance the market but signs the market is tightening have emerged.

“Strong increases in the price of oil ... (were) fuelled in large part by the substantia­l drawdowns in US inventorie­s over the past several weeks,” said William O’Loughlin, analyst at Rivkin Securities.

US crude inventorie­s have fallen by 10% from their March peaks to 483.4 million barrels. Drilling for new US production is also slowing. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Crude oil prices have risen around 10% since the last Opec meeting.
Crude oil prices have risen around 10% since the last Opec meeting.

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