Oil dodges bears, climbs
back toward $52 per barrel
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[August 02, 2017]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil shook off a raft of
bearish headlines on Wednesday, as investors and traders took advantage
of earlier losses and pushed the price back toward $52 and this week's
eight-week highs.
Brent crude futures <LCOc1> were up 14 cents at $51.92 a barrel by 1125
GMT, up from a session low of $51.18. The price hit $52.93 on Monday,
its highest since late May.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude <CLc1> edged up 2 cents to $49.18 a
barrel.
Both contracts fell sharply the previous day after Royal Dutch Shell
said its 400,000-barrels-per-day (bpd) Pernis refinery in the
Netherlands would remain offline for at least the next couple of weeks
following a fire.
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Petromatrix strategist Olivier Jakob said Wednesday's price recovery had
more to do with technical trading than with outright fundamentals, which
had encouraged traders and investors to buy crude futures.
"There are some technical battles out there today. We are trading around
the 200-day moving average and I think that is where a lot of the action
of the last two days has been," Jakob said.
Brent futures fell through their 200-day moving average on Monday, but
by Wednesday managed to vault above this trendline, which was last
around $51.85 a barrel.
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An oil pump jack pumps oil in a field near Calgary, Alberta, Canada
July 21, 2014. REUTERS/Todd Korol/File Photo
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Traders are awaiting the release of official U.S. government data on weekly
crude inventory levels after an independent survey on Tuesday showed an
unexpected rise of 1.8 million barrels.
The Energy Information Administration is scheduled to release weekly stockpile
data at 1430 GMT on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, production from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
hit a 2017 high of 33 million bpd in July, despite the group's pledge to
restrict output along with other non-OPEC producers.
Energy consultancy Douglas Westwood reckons this year's oil market will be
slightly undersupplied but that the glut will return next year, and last until
2021.
"Oversupply will actually return in 2018. This is due to the start-up of fields
sanctioned prior to the downturn," said Steve Robertson, head of research for
global oilfield services at Douglas Westwood.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; editing by Dale Hudson
and Jason Neely)
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