Business World

US oil prices rise to 2-week high on Cushing draw

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NEW YORK — US crude hit a near two-week high in a choppy session on Tuesday amid inventory declines at a key storage hub and on expectatio­ns that top producers could extend cooperatio­n beyond 2018, while Brent fell under pressure from a stronger dollar.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and non- OPEC oil producers, including Russia, will discuss extending their cooperatio­n for many more years when they meet in June as they seek to avoid major market shocks, United Arab Emirates’ energy minister and OPEC President Suhail al-Mazroui told Reuters.

Data from market intelligen­ce firm Genscape showed that inventorie­s at Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point for US crude futures, fell 2.1 million barrels in the week to Feb. 16, according to traders who saw the data.

The combinatio­n of a new pipeline running from the hub to Memphis, along with reduced flows from TransCanad­a’s Keystone pipeline, have sent stockpiles in Cushing to the lowest in about three years.

Flows on Keystone pipeline were reduced after a leak in November.

A strengthen­ing dollar, which hit a six- day high, however, weighed on oil prices. A more robust dollar makes oil and other dollar- denominate­d commoditie­s more expensive for holders of other currencies.

Brent crude futures ended the session 42 cents, or 0.60%, lower at $ 65.25 a barrel after trading between $65.81 and $64.78 a barrel.

US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude futures settled up 22 cents, or 0.40%, at $ 61.90 a barrel, as the March contract expired. Prices rallied to a high of $62.74 a barrel early in the session, the highest since Feb. 7.

The most active US crude futures contract for delivery in April settled up 24 cents at $61.79 a barrel.

Front month US crude’s discount to the second month flipped to a discount ahead of the March contract’s expiration, falling to a low of a discount of 10 cents per barrel, the widest since Dec. 11.

Monday’s US holiday for Presidents Day supported WTI’s performanc­e compared with Brent as the US markets caught up with Monday’s gains, said Carsten Fritsch, oil analyst at Commerzban­k AG in Frankfurt, Germany.

The divergence in prices kept US crude’s discount to Brent near a six-month low after widening to more than $7 in December.

A narrower premium of Brent to WTI means it is less attractive for consumers in northwest Europe to import US crude, especially with refiners conducting maintenanc­e. Premiums for local North Sea grades are at multimonth lows.

“(Brent’s) premium has been narrowing. It’s more so that WTI has been rising and Brent’s kind of stayed flat…it doesn’t make the exporting of oil out of the US as attractive,” said Rob Thummel, portfolio manager at energy investment manager Tortoise Capital in Kansas City, Missouri.

Overall, oil markets remain supported by supply restraint on the part of OPEC, which started last year to draw down excess global inventorie­s.

Ayed Al Qahtani, OPEC’s head of research, said the excess of oil held in storage has fallen in the past year to stand 74 million barrels above the five-year average.

This compares with a surplus of around 340 million barrels in January 2017, he said.

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