China's trade performance slumped in January, pointing to lower fuel
demand in the world's biggest energy consumer. Exports fell 3.3
percent from a year earlier while imports tumbled 19.9 percent,
highlighting a deepening slowdown.
But the falling number of U.S. oil rigs, at its lowest since
December 2011, reduced the impact of the Chinese data on oil prices,
which have dropped more than 50 percent since June.
Stronger-than-expected growth in U.S. jobs in January also helped
support oil, as non-farm payrolls increased 257,000, outstripping
Wall Street forecasts.
Global benchmark Brent crude oil <LCOc1> for March was up 10 cents
at $57.90 a barrel by 1118 GMT (06:18 a.m. EST) after rising as high
as $59.06 earlier in the session. U.S. crude <CLc1> was up 56 cents
at $52.25 a barrel, having hit a session high of $53.40.
While signs of an economic slowdown in China depressed the market,
analysts said crude import figures remained high and the
disappointing data was unlikely to derail a rally in oil prices.
"I think we'll get a bit of a pullback. But will it send prices back
to the lows? I'm not convinced about that," said Michael Hewson,
chief market analyst at CMC Markets.
"We've had such a strong decline that some sort of bounce back is
inevitable."
Brent rose more than 9 percent last week, its biggest weekly rise
since February 2011. The North Sea oil futures contract has climbed
more than 18 percent in the past two weeks, its strongest showing
since 1998.
"It's still the same pattern," said Carsten Fritsch, senior oil and
commodities analyst at Commerzbank in Frankfurt. "Markets are
ignoring the bearish news and rather trade on the bullish news."
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Preliminary Chinese January customs data came in at 27.22 million
tonnes of crude imports, though estimates from Thomson Reuters
Research and Forecasts put the final figure at about 30 million
tonnes.
Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao said crude charts suggested the
increase in prices may have ended for a while.
"I prefer a bearish bias," Wang Tao told Reuters Global Oil Forum.
"Both WTI and Brent may correct in this week before seeking their
next direction."
(Additional reporting by Manolo Serapio Jr and Henning Gloystein in
Singapore; Editing by David Clarke)
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