Oil hits 2016 high on
ebbing supply, softer dollar
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[June 07, 2016]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices hit their
highest in eight months on Tuesday, buoyed by the dollar nearing
one-month lows and by falling Nigerian oil output after a spate of
attacks on infrastructure.
Brent crude futures were up 67 cents on the day at $51.22 a
barrel by 1135 GMT, having hit an intraday peak of $51.29 earlier in
the day, their highest since October.
U.S. crude oil futures rose 60 cents to $50.29 a barrel, having
touched a fresh 2016 peak of $50.37, their highest since October
last year.
"With Brent staying above $50, oil is on an upward momentum with the
restart of French refineries that were shut on strikes and pipeline
attacks in Nigeria," said Kaname Gokon at brokerage Okato Shoji in
Tokyo.
Preliminary work got under way on Monday to restart three of Total's
French oil refineries, stopped as part of nationwide strikes.
Crude futures have nearly doubled since January when they hit their
lowest since late 2003 buoyed by supply outages in Canada,
Venezuela, Libya and Nigeria.
Nigeria's Bonny Light crude output is down by an estimated 170,000
barrels per day (bpd) following attacks on pipeline infrastructure,
according to one source.
OPEC failed to agree on a clear oil output strategy last week, but
traders said Saudi Arabia's promise not to flood the market has
provided support to oil.
Oil, along with the rest of the commodities complex, has also been
supported by a weaker dollar.
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen has indicated the U.S. central
bank will raise interest rates, but has not given a sense of when. [USD/]
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U.S. commercial crude oil inventories likely fell by 3.5 million barrels last
week, marking a third straight weekly drop, a preliminary Reuters poll showed.
The data by the American Petroleum Institute is due out at 2030 GMT. [EIA/S]
Oil also received support after market intelligence firm Genscape reported a
drawdown of 1.08 million barrels at the Cushing, Oklahoma, delivery point for
WTI crude futures last week.
But this support may prove fleeting.
The market is braced for signs of recovering U.S. oil production after weekly
data from Baker Hughes showed that U.S. drillers added rigs for only the second
time this year, analysts said.
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"Oil prices at $50 a barrel could revive shale drilling activity and stabilise
declining U.S. oil production, possibly already harbingered by the recent uptick
in rig counts," said Norbert Rücker, head of commodities research at Julius
Baer.
(Additional reporting by Osamu Tsukimori in Tokyo; Editing by Jason Neely and
William Hardy)
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