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						Oil up as OPEC cuts 
						outweigh rise in U.S. stocks 
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		 [February 02, 2017] 
		By Christopher Johnson 
 LONDON 
		(Reuters) - Oil prices rose on Thursday as evidence that OPEC and other 
		big exporters were cutting production outweighed a sharp rise in U.S. 
		crude and gasoline stockpiles.
 
 Brent crude was up 50 cents at $57.30 a barrel by 1145 GMT after 
		settling up $1.22 in the previous session. U.S. light crude gained 30 
		cents to $54.18 after climbing by $1.07 on Wednesday.
 
 Both crude oil benchmarks are now near the top of recent price ranges. 
		Brent has spent most of the past two months trading between $53 and $58 
		a barrel, at a premium of around $2.50 to the U.S. crude futures 
		contract.
 
 "The current sentiment is bullish," said Tamas Varga, analyst at London 
		brokerage PVM Oil Associates, but added, "We are still firmly within the 
		ranges. I think buyers will shy away if the market jumps another 
		dollar."
 
 U.S. crude oil inventories rose last week by an unexpected 6.5 million 
		barrels to 494.76 million barrels, the Energy Information Administration 
		said on Wednesday. The build in crude stocks far exceeded analysts' 
		expectations for an increase of 3.3 million barrels.
 
		 
		Gasoline stocks climbed by 3.9 million barrels, compared with analyst 
		expectations of a 1 million barrel gain.
 Inventories in the United States, the world's biggest oil consumer, have 
		been near record highs for much of the past year and domestic production 
		is rising as U.S. companies drill for shale oil.
 
			
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			An oil tanker is pictured at a port in Yangzhou, Jiangsu Province, 
			China, March 1, 2016. REUTERS/Stringer 
            
			 
But 
prices have been underpinned by indications that producers from the Organization 
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other exporters are cutting output.
 The curbs follow an agreement last year by OPEC and other exporters to reduce 
supplies by a combined 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) to prop up prices that 
remain at about half their mid-2014 levels.
 
 A Reuters survey this week found that most key oil producers were sticking to 
the deal, with compliance above 80 percent.[OPEC/O]
 
 Russian oil output contracted in January by 100,000 bpd, Energy Ministry data 
showed on Thursday.
 
 Tension between the United States and Tehran is also rising after Iran tested a 
ballistic missile, raising the possibility of future sanctions that could curb 
Iranian oil supply.
 
 (Additional reporting by Keith Wallis in Singapore and Aaron Sheldrick in Tokyo; 
Editing by Alexander Smith and David Goodman)
 
 
				 
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