U.S. energy firms this week added one oil rig after 12 weeks of
cuts, according to data by industry firm Baker Hughes. The addition,
coming after oil rigs had fallen by two-thirds over the past year to
2009 lows, showed crude drilling picking up again after a 50 percent
price rally since February. [RIG/U]
"The rig count and crude prices have a direct relationship for
sure," said Pete Donovan, broker at Liquidity Energy in New York.
Brent crude <LCOc1> finished down 34 cents, or 0.8 percent, at
$41.20 a barrel, having risen $1 earlier to a 2016 high of $42.54.
U.S. crude <CLc1> settled down 76 cents, or 1.9 percent, at $39.44,
after also gaining $1 to a year high of $41.20.
Despite the retreat, oil posted multi-week gains, with Brent up for
a fourth straight week and U.S. crude a fifth week in a row. Both
benchmarks rose about 2 percent this week.
Global oversupply in oil had knocked crude prices down from mid-2014
highs above $100 a barrel to 12-year lows earlier this year,
bringing Brent to around $27 and U.S. crude to about $26.
Over the past two months, prices rallied to reach above $40 after
the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) floated
the idea of a production freeze at January's highs.
The combination of declining oil output, smaller crude stockpile
builds and surging gasoline consumption in the United States also
helped the recovery, although some analysts said the rally had been
overdone.
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"The market is probably too long here and needs a correction," said
Scott Shelton, energy futures broker with ICAP in Durham, North
Carolina.
Some traders who had been bearish oil and lost money recently were
eyeing fresh bets to price crude lower.
"I think this rally will stall," said Tariq Zahir, who profited
mostly over the last year on bets that U.S. crude for nearby
delivery will fall against longer-dated contracts. "I took off
several shorts and booked losses but on the first sign of weakness,
I'm jumping back in."
(Additional reporting by Simon Falush in LONDON; Editing by
Marguerita Choy, Frances Kerry and Meredith Mazzilli)
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