Brent oil rises as euro zone morale boost
offsets oversupply concern
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[March 25, 2015]
By Himanshu Ojha
LONDON (Reuters) - Brent oil prices firmed
on Wednesday as business morale in the euro zone's top two economies
improved, offsetting concerns about oversupply that has filled fuel
storage tanks around the world.
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Germany, Europe's largest economy, saw business morale rise for
the fifth month in a row in March, hitting its highest since July
2014, Ifo's business climate index showed.
Business morale also rose in France to its highest for nearly three
years.
Brent crude oil <LCOc1> was up 18 cents at $55.29 a barrel by 1117
GMT. U.S. light crude oil <CLc1> was down 29 cents at $47.22 per
barrel.
U.S. crude oil inventories rose by 4.8 million barrels in the week
to March 20, data from the American Petroleum Institute (API) showed
on Tuesday, pushing total U.S. crude oil stockpiles to record highs
above 450 million barrels. [API/S]
Chinese crude oil stocks are also at historic highs and the
country's commercial and strategic storage is almost full, a Sinopec
trading executive told an industry forum on Wednesday.
With storage approaching its limit, China's oil imports will likely
stay flat or rise only slightly this year, the official said.
Analysts from the International Energy Agency and the Organization
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries estimate that world oil demand
is now running at more than 1.5 million barrels per day below supply
on average and say the market is unlikely to balance until the
second half of this year.
That means several more months of rising inventory levels and the
risk of more pressure on oil prices.
China has been taking advantage of cheap oil to build up its
strategic petroleum reserves (SPRs), helping push its imports to
record highs late last year despite an economy growing at its
slowest pace in 25 years, but that process is now ending.
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"Although the market should already have expected that the demand
from China's SPR would not last forever, it (was) hard to predict
when this time would come," said Daniel Ang, investment analyst at
oil brokerage Phillip Futures.
U.S. oil prices have been squeezed as crude stocks continue to rise
to record highs.
Investors awaited U.S. oil inventory data from the Energy
Information Administration (EIA) due later on Wednesday to see
whether it confirmed the API report.
A Reuters poll of eight analysts forecast the EIA report would show
a crude stock build of 5.1 million barrels on average last week.
[EIA/S]
(Additional reporting by Christopher Johnson in London and Henning
Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson)
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