Gulf News

Brent crude set for biggest weekly gain

Both Brent crude and West Texas Intermedia­te have added more than 7% this week as glut eases

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Oil headed for its biggest weekly increase this year in London as sliding US inventorie­s and signs of stronger demand signalled the supply glut in the world’s biggest consumer may be easing.

Both Brent crude and US benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te have added more than 7 per cent last week. US crude stockpiles fell to the lowest since January, while gasoline inventorie­s were the smallest this year, the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion said Wednesday. The American Petroleum Institute said on Thursday that the nation’s fuel use in June surged to the highest for that month in a decade.

US oil prices are inching closer to $50 (Dh183.50) a barrel, a level Brent breached earlier this week. Concerns are abating that efforts by the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies to curb output will be offset by rising production elsewhere. Kuwait last week joined the UAE in promising to pump less after Saudi Arabia called on Opec producers to improve compliance with their pledged cuts.

“The market has become very rangebound,” Francisco Blanch, head of commoditie­s research at Bank of America Corp, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “Below $45 in WTI we lose supply. Above $55 we gain too much supply.”

Brent for September settlement added 22 cents to $51.71 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange at 1:15pm local time, heading for a weekly advance of 7.6 per cent. The contract climbed 52 cents, or 1 per cent, on Thursday to close at $51.49. The global benchmark crude traded at a premium of $2.60 to WTI.

Front-month Brent futures traded at a premium to the second month for the first time since January, with a spread of 11 cents a barrel. While this pattern, known as backwardat­ion, typically signals tighter supplies, it could be affected by the upcoming expiry of the current frontmonth contract on July 31.

West Texas Intermedia­te for September delivery was at $49.10 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, 6 cents higher. Sensex (IN)

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