Brent
crude oil hits 2015 high as U.S. output slows
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[April 16, 2015]
By Christopher Johnson
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil rose more than 3
percent on Thursday, pushing Brent crude to a 2015 high above $63 per
barrel on increasing evidence that U.S. production is peaking, balancing
a market that has been in heavy oversupply for more than a year.
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Oil prices collapsed in the six months to January, pushing Brent
down more than 60 percent to almost $45 a barrel.
But the market has gradually recovered this year as much lower
prices have discouraged oil exploration and production, especially
in the United States.
"People are realizing that the U.S. production juggernaut is
slowing, at least for now," said Virendra Chauhan, oil analyst at
London-based consultancy Energy Aspects.
"U.S. production is down for the second time in three weeks and
refinery runs are spiking up, driving demand higher."
Brent crude futures for June <LCOc1> on Thursday hit $63.29 a
barrel, the highest since December, after the previous much weaker
front-month futures contract, for May, expired on Wednesday.
By 1030 GMT, June Brent was at $62.52 a barrel, down 80 cents from
the previous close for June, but up sharply from Wednesday's close
for May at $60.32.
U.S. crude <CLc1> was at $55.39, down $1.00, after hitting a 2015
high of $56.69 on Wednesday.
U.S. crude has been logging its strongest upswing this year as
ebbing fears of an inventory overflow and renewed hedging in
far-distance futures flatten the forward curve.
"We turn extremely bullish on oil," Singapore-based energy brokerage
Phillips Futures said in a note to clients.
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"This whole rally was primarily due to drops in U.S. crude
production. We see the four-week average for crude production
turning negative for the first time since July '14," it added.
Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao told Reuters Global Oil Forum
that Brent could rise toward $70 a barrel in the near term, but that
a sharp downturn could happen after that.
U.S. oil prices jumped on Wednesday after U.S. inventories built up
more slowly than expected, although still to a new record. Talks
between major oil producers also triggered speculation of production
cuts, even though most analysts said these were unlikely.
Despite the oil price rally, the market remains oversupplied,
analysts say.
"The recent bounce comes despite a surge in OPEC crude oil
production in March which is likely to have been sustained in
April," ANZ bank said.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by
Dale Hudson and Jason Neely)
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