Oil
set for weekly rise as gasoline buoys prices
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[February 26, 2016]
By Libby George
LONDON (Reuters) - Crude oil prices
reversed early losses on Friday, with Brent on track for its first
weekly gain in a month, as strong U.S. gasoline demand and hopes of OPEC
action outweighed concerns over fundamental oversupply.
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Brent crude futures were trading at $36.09 a barrel at 1100 GMT
(06:00 a.m. EST), up 80 cents from their last close and an intra-day
low of $34.73. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures
were up 75 cents at $33.82.
The gains, if they hold, would mark the third consecutive daily
increase for Brent and the fifth for U.S. benchmark WTI.
Traders said that the rises were driven by short positions closed
ahead of Brent's expiry next week and by strong demand for gasoline
in the United States.
But analysts said the oversupplied market, which many do not expect
to balance until early next year, would pull prices back down in the
near term.
"I don't think it is fundamentally justified ... I don't think it
will last," Tamas Varga, oil analyst at PVM in London, said of the
rise in prices.
Prices had also received a boost from Venezuelan Oil Minister
Eulogio Del Pino saying late on Thursday that Qatar, Russia and
Saudi Arabia had agreed to a meeting in mid-March as part of efforts
to stabilize oil markets.
Strong gasoline demand in the United States was a big support. Data
from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed gasoline
inventories falling last week for the first time since early
November, suggesting that consumers could gobble up more of the
world's oil products than expected.
"The idea that gasoline demand is actually rising suggests that
perhaps the lower prices of crude are actually prompting a greater
usage of this product (gasoline)," said Vyanne Lai, oil analyst at
National Australia Bank.
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The data is a glimmer of hope for markets grappling with a glut
exacerbated by crude production that is exceeding demand by 1
million to 2 million barrels per day (bpd), though Iran's target of
increasing its exports by 1 million bpd within the next year looms
over the market.
In the longer term, however, analysts expect oil prices to rise
again.
Investment bank Jefferies called current prices unsustainable and
said that production declines across most of the important non-OPEC
producers is likely to set the stage for an oil price recovery in
the second half of this year.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein and Manesha Pereira;
Editing by David Goodman)
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