Oil rises as Chinese
output drops, U.S. inventories shrink
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[October 19, 2016]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON
(Reuters) - Oil prices rose by around 1 percent on Wednesday, boosted by
evidence of declining production in China and falling U.S. inventories,
while an upbeat OPEC statement on its planned output cut also supported
the market.
A slightly weaker dollar reinforced the strength in oil as well, traders
said, as it makes fuel purchases cheaper for countries using other
currencies, potentially spurring demand.
Benchmark Brent crude futures were at $52.45 a barrel, up 77 cents by
1205 GMT (0805 EDT). U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil
futures were up 79 cents at $51.08 a barrel.
Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said on Wednesday that oil
markets were at the end of a considerable downturn as fundamentals were
improving and supply and demand were rebalancing.
He called on non-OPEC producers to help stabilize the market saying
their role was as critical as the role of OPEC members.
"Market forces are clearly working after a testing period of sub-$30 oil
prices... Oil demand is expanding at a healthy rate despite slower
global growth," he said.
As the world's largest exporters prepare to discuss the first cut in
output in eight years next month, the pressure of persistently low oil
prices on higher-cost producers is becoming apparent.
China's crude output fell 9.8 percent to 3.89 million barrels per day,
near its lowest in six years in their second-biggest year-on-year
decline on record.
"The fall in Chinese crude oil production is probably attributable to
the low price level, which makes parts of production unprofitable. This
makes it all the harder to understand why OPEC is talking prices up with
its current debate about production cuts, and is thus helping precisely
those oil producers it would ideally like to force out of the market,"
Commerzbank analysts wrote.
Adding to the support to crude prices from lower output, refining rates
in China rose last month. China processed 43.8 million tonnes (10.7
million bpd) of crude oil in September, up 2.4 percent from a year
earlier.
U.S. crude stockpiles fell 3.8 million barrels in the week to Oct. 14,
to 467.1 million, the API reported late on Tuesday. [API/S]
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A gas station attendant pumps fuel into a customer's car at
PetroChina's petrol station in Beijing, China, March 21, 2016.
REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) is due to release
official crude and fuel storage data on Wednesday.
Another drop would be the sixth fall in inventories in seven weeks. [EIA/S]
Mohammed Barkindo, secretary general of the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), gave the market a boost by saying
he is confident about the prospects of a planned production cut
following an OPEC meeting on Nov. 30.
"I am optimistic we will have a decision," he said.
In its first output cut agreement since 2008, OPEC said it plans to
reduce production to 32.50 million to 33.0 million bpd, compared with
record output of 33.6 million bpd in September.
The group also hopes non-OPEC producers, especially Russia, will
cooperate in a cut.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; editing by
William Hardy and Jason neely)
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