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						 Oil 
						rallies towards $41, near 2016 high, on producer meeting 
						
		 
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		[March 17, 2016] 
		By Alex Lawler 
						
		LONDON (Reuters) - Oil rose towards $41 a 
		barrel on Thursday, trading close to a 2016 high, bolstered by a plan 
		among some of the world's biggest producers to meet next month to 
		discuss supporting the market. 
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			 OPEC and non-OPEC producers including the top two exporters, Saudi 
			Arabia and Russia, will hold talks on April 17 in Qatar over a plan 
			to freeze output, increasing the likelihood of the first global 
			supply deal in 15 years. 
			 
			Brent crude was up 51 cents at $40.84 a barrel by 1119 GMT. It has 
			rallied over 50 percent from a 12-year low of $27.10 in January and 
			reached a 2016 peak of $41.48 on March 8. 
			 
			U.S. crude  was up 62 cents at $39.08 a barrel. 
			 
			"For now, the market is staying well supported, and the dollar is 
			proving additional support," said Olivier Jakob, oil analyst at 
			Petromatrix. "It will be difficult to return to the lows of the 
			year." 
			  
			The U.S. dollar weakened following a statement by the Federal 
			Reserve on Wednesday that undermined expectations of a rise in 
			interest rates by June. 
			 
			A weaker dollar makes dollar-denominated commodities cheaper for 
			holders of other currencies, and tends to support oil. 
			 
			The producer meeting follows a preliminary deal in February between 
			Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Venezuela, plus non-OPEC Russia, to freeze 
			output in a bid to tackle the excess supply that has caused prices 
			to slide from levels above $100 seen in mid-2014. 
			 
			Qatar's Energy Minister Mohammed Bin Saleh Al-Sada said on Wednesday 
			around 15 producers in and outside the Organization of the Petroleum 
			Exporting Countries, accounting for about 73 percent of global oil 
			output, supported the initiative. 
			
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			Oil broker PVM said the meeting was "an encouraging step" but was 
			skeptical that the freeze deal, which ministers have said is based 
			on January 2016 output, would prop up prices. 
			 
			"It is hard to see such a meeting reaching an agreement that is 
			price-supportive because these producers are discussing the prospect 
			of freezing oil output at historically high levels," Tamas Varga of 
			PVM said in a report. 
			 
			Oil also gained support from a smaller-than-expected rise in U.S. 
			inventories. But crude stocks still hit a record, the U.S. Energy 
			Information Administration said on Wednesday. [EIA/S] 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Aaron Sheldrick in Tokyo; Editing by Dale 
			Hudson) 
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