Oil gains 2 percent as global markets stabilize, dollar
dips
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[February 12, 2018]
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil rose nearly 2
percent on Monday, recovering some of last week's steep losses as global
equities steadied after their largest one-week slide in two years.
Brent crude futures <LCOc1> gained 82 cents to $63.61 a barrel by 1302
GMT, up nearly 2 percent, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures
<CLc1> rose by $1 to $60.20.
A weaker dollar helped to boost oil by making dollar-priced crude
cheaper for holders of other currencies. [FRX/]
European shares took their lead from Friday's rise on Wall Street, while
other commodities including copper and gold also strengthened. [MKTS/GLOB]
Consumption remains robust, even though rising U.S. crude production has
knocked oil off its 2018 highs above $70 and threatened the efforts of
the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to prop up prices
by reining in supply.
"Demand growth is very strong and, with (output) declines in places like
Venezuela, is helping the situation. If demand stays strong, it still
looks like OPEC will be in control in 2019," said SEB chief commodities
strategist Bjarne Schieldrop.
"If global growth does slow down and oil demand starts to slow, then
production growth in the U.S. becomes a problem, because OPEC's cake
starts to shrink and that will be the line in the sand."
U.S. oil production <C-OUT-T-EIA> has risen above 10 million barrels per
day (bpd), overtaking top exporter Saudi Arabia and coming within reach
of top producer Russia.
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OPEC and partners including Russia have agreed to cut their crude output by 1.8
million bpd for a second year, but U.S. production looks set to continue to
grow.
U.S. energy companies added 26 oil rigs looking for new production last week,
boosting the count to 791, the highest since April 2015, energy services company
Baker Hughes said on Friday.
"The increase over the last month has been driven primarily from private
producers," U.S. bank Goldman Sachs said in a note. "Investor fear around
greater U.S. oil production/lack of producer discipline has risen."
PVM Oil Associates strategist Stephen Brennock said these are tough times for
oil bulls.
"Positives may appear in short supply but, along with OPEC-led production curbs,
buyers can take solace from a healthy global oil demand backdrop. Much of this
is owing to China’s ravenous thirst for oil, which saw it surpass the U.S. to
become the world’s largest crude importer in 2017," he said.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in SINGAPORE; Editing by Dale Hudson
and David Goodman)
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