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						Oil edges up, breaking 
						six-day stretch of losses 
						
		 
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		 [April 25, 2017] 
		By Amanda Cooper 
		 
		
		LONDON 
		(Reuters) - Oil prices nudged higher on Tuesday, breaking a six-day 
		streak of price falls, but doubts about OPEC's ability to reduce global 
		crude inventories capped gains. 
		 
		Brent crude  was up 8 cents at $51.68 a barrel by 1145 GMT, while 
		U.S. crude futures were up 4 cents at $49.27 a barrel. 
		 
		Brent is down 10 percent since late 2016, despite efforts led by the 
		Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and Russia to cut 
		output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) in the first half of 2017. 
		 
		With oil supplies still around record highs, Stephen Schork of the 
		Schork report said on Tuesday that "OPEC has failed miserably in its 
		endeavor to balance the oil market". 
		 
		JPMorgan said in a market note "it is evident that ... crude markets are 
		still struggling to clear (oversupply)". The bank said it was closing 
		its "August Brent long position at a loss." 
						
		
		  
						
		To reduce the supply overhang, JPMorgan said OPEC "will be forced to 
		renew, and possibly deepen the agreement if they wish to keep prices 
		much above $50 per barrel". 
		 
		Russia said at the weekend its oil output could climb to the highest 
		rate in 30 years if OPEC and non-OPEC producers do not extend their 
		supply reduction deal beyond June 30. 
		 
		Extreme weakness in physical crude, where prices in the North Sea market 
		have fallen to their lowest this year, is also acting as a drag on 
		futures. [CRU/E] 
						
		
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			A pump jack and pipes are seen on an oil field near Bakersfield on a 
			foggy day, California January 18, 2015. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson 
            
			  
But 
one analyst said crude demand could pick up and the long-awaited draw in global 
inventories could start to show with refinery maintenance around Europe and 
Russia set to peak in May at an estimated 1.5 million bpd. 
 
"If you look at the last six weeks, when you include the U.S., Europe, Singapore 
and floating storage, (inventories) have been going down on average by 8 million 
barrels a week," SEB commodities strategist Bjarne Schieldrop said. 
 
If that pace continued, he said it would equate to a draw down of 250 million to 
300 million barrels by the end of 2017. 
 
"With refineries out, you have a lot of crude oil sloshing around, creating 
weakness in the spot price," he said. "We still have the OPEC meeting ahead of 
us on May 25 and it's always uncertain. But it doesn’t make sense to sell down 
to $45 ahead of that." 
 
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson 
and Edmund Blair) 
				 
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