Oil
bounces back above $56 as dollar weakens, majors cut investments
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[February 12, 2015]
By Himanshu Ojha and David Sheppard
LONDON (Reuters) - Brent crude oil rallied
almost $2 to above $56 per barrel on Thursday, rebounding from a two-day
losing streak, with industry spending cuts and a weaker dollar boosting
buying.
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The CEO of Shell said Thursday that supply might not be able to keep
up with growing demand after oil companies around the world slashed
budgets following the near halving in prices since June.
French energy major Total became the latest to announce investment
and job cuts on Thursday, taking a $6.5 billion writedown because of
weak oil prices.
March Brent futures were up $1.89 at $56.55 a barrel by 1528
GMT (10:28 a.m. EST), following a 3 percent loss in the previous
session when prices fell below $54 a barrel at one point.
U.S. March crude futures were trading up $1.31 at $50.15, after
falling more than 2 percent in the previous session.
Traders remain split over whether the market has found a floor after
rising 25 percent from a post-2009 low near $45 a month ago. Many
still see the market as oversupplied by up to 2 million barrels per
day in the first half of this year.
Volatility in the oil market has jumped to its highest level since
the financial crisis as traders battle it out, with prices swinging
in wide daily ranges so far in February.
Traders pointed to a weaker dollar as boosting buying on Thursday as
the U.S. unit fell as much as 0.7 percent against a basket of
currencies, making dollar-priced commodities such as oil cheaper.
"We saw a heavy selloff in commodities yesterday and I think that's
why we're getting a little bit of a rebound in oil prices," said
Michael Hewson, chief analyst at CMC Markets.
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Saudi Arabia's oil minister Ali al-Naimi discussed a "relative
improvement" in the oil market with Algerian Justice Minister Tayeb
Louh, Saudi state news agency SPA reported on Wednesday.
Saudi Arabia will keep March crude supply to Asia steady, industry
sources told Reuters.
U.S. crude stocks rose to a record weekly high last week, while
gasoline stocks increased and distillate inventories fell, data from
the Energy Information Administration showed on Wednesday.
On Thursday, Kuwait suspended crude and oil product exports as a
sandstorm hit the Gulf OPEC member. The temporary suspension will be
lifted when weather conditions improve.
(Additional reporting by Adam Rose in Beijing; Editing by Dale
Hudson and Ruth Pitchford)
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