Oil
price up on U.S. stock draws, demand outlook
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[August 13, 2015]
By Libby George and Lisa Barrington
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on
Thursday as lower U.S. crude stocks and optimistic global demand
projections overrode concerns about a glut of supply.
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U.S. stockpiles of crude and gasoline fell last week, data from the
Energy Information Administration (EIA) showed on Wednesday,
bolstering sentiment in the U.S. market.
Benchmark North Sea Brent crude oil was up 60 cents at $50.26 a
barrel by 0855 GMT. U.S. crude was trading at $43.50 per barrel, up
20 cents.
Traders said a slide in the value of the dollar against a basket of
currencies this week also helped strengthen oil markets. The
U.S. currency rallied on Thursday but reached a one-month low on
Wednesday.
A weaker dollar makes oil more affordable to holders of other
currencies and tends to support commodity prices.
"It matches very well with the U.S. dollar curve," Bjarne Schieldrop,
chief commodities analyst with SEB in Oslo, said of oil's gains.
"That was a clear driver in my view."
Despite the rise, plenty of bearish factors loomed.
Iraq, OPEC's second largest producer, plans to export near-record
volumes of Basra crude in September, adding to an already
oversupplied market.
China's shaky economic growth, and recent moves by Beijing to
devalue its currency, have cast doubt on its potential oil
consumption.
China's implied oil demand fell in July from the previous month amid
a continuing drop in its vehicle sales that could mute growth
further in the second half of 2015.
"All is not well with the Chinese economy," Howie Lee of Phillip
Futures told Reuters Global Oil Forum.
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"There is so much pessimism attached to this move (yuan
devaluation). For China to start a fresh currency war... smacks of
desperation," he added.
Falling margins at Asian refineries have led Chinese and Korean
refiners to cut production, thus lowering their demand for crude
oil.
Problems with a major refinery in the U.S. Midwest, along with the
coming refinery maintenance season, have also raised fears that the
country's Cushing, Oklahoma, oil hub could fill its storage tanks.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
in Singapore; Editing by)
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