Oil
rally holds, promising second weekly gain
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[February 06, 2015]
By Libby George
LONDON (Reuters) - Brent crude oil traded
almost $2 higher on Friday, on track for its second weekly increase, as
fighting in Libya and stronger economic signals from the United States
helped futures rebound from near-six-year lows.
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Prices remain roughly 50 percent below their peak from the middle of
last year, and no rapid recovery is expected amid rising global
inventories and steady OPEC supply.
But further declines in the U.S. oil-rig count, concerns over dented
output from Libya, a key Mediterranean oil producer, and the
anticipation of stronger U.S. jobs data boosted prices.
The average number of U.S. rigs drilling for oil fell by 199 in
January from December, following the largest weekly drop since 1987
last week, Baker Hughes said.
"Any time you see a declining rig count, that's going to be a
support, said Dominic Haywood, crude oil analyst for Energy Aspects.
"Crude is pretty strong."
Benchmark Brent crude traded $1.90 higher at $58.47 per barrel by
1155 GMT (06:55 a.m. EST). On Thursday, Brent closed up $2.41.
U.S. crude for March delivery traded at $52.18 per barrel, up $1.70,
after trading more than $2 higher. The contract finished with a gain
of $2.03 the previous day.
Fighting across Libya, where two governments and parliaments allied
to rival armed groups are vying for control, highlighted the threat
of a breakup in the country, imperiling the country's oil exports.
U.S. non-farm payroll data due later on Friday is expected to show
firm job growth in the world's largest oil consumer in January, a
positive signal for demand.
These developments helped override worries over a global glut of
oil, as well as cuts to the official selling price to Asia from top
OPEC producer Saudi Arabia to the lowest level in at least 12 years.
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The cut highlights Middle Eastern producers' battle to gain market
share in Asia, but increases to official Saudi selling prices to the
United States and Europe left a mixed signal.
"The official selling price to Europe increased quite a lot," said
Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix. "They're reflecting the tighter
picture in the Mediterranean."
Still, many analysts forecast price gains to be short-lived, and
limited. Growing numbers of OPEC delegates say they expect no rapid
recovery in oil prices.
A strike at nine U.S. refineries accounting for 10 percent of U.S.
capacity also headed into a sixth day after union leaders rejected
the latest contract offer from lead negotiator Royal Dutch Shell
Plc.
(Additional reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen in Singapore;
Editing by Dale Hudson and David Evans)
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