Brent crude oil futures were up 18 cents, or 0.25%, at $72.40 a
barrel by 1024 GMT, holding just shy of a high not seen since
May 2019.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate oil futures rose 11 cents, or
0.16%, to $70.07 a barrel, staying near its highest since Oct.
2018.
"The market is recovering impressively from yesterday's dismal
weekly EIA report, the drop in weekly gasoline demand was
particularly disappointing," said Tamas Varga, analyst at PVM
Oil Associates.
"It will interesting to see whether the monthly OPEC report due
out later will confirm last month's upbeat demand assessment for
the second half the year. If it does, as expected, it should
support oil prices."
Varga added that U.S. inflation data and jobless claims would
provide more direction on the health of world's biggest economy
and clues as to whether the Federal Reserve might start tapering
stimulus.
U.S. crude oil stockpiles that include the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve (SPR) fell for the 11th straight week as refiners ramped
up output, but fuel inventories grew sharply due to weak
consumer demand, the Energy Information Administration (EIA)
said on Wednesday. [EIA/S]
Crude inventories that exclude the SPR fell by 5.2 million
barrels in the week to June 4 to 474 million barrels, the third
consecutive weekly drop. But fuel stocks were up sharply, with
product supplied falling to 17.7 million barrels per day (bpd)
versus 19.1 million the week before.
Implied gasoline demand fell to 8.48 million bpd in the week to
June 4, down from 9.15 million bpd from the week before, but up
from 7.9 million bpd a year ago, EIA data showed.
Weighing on prices, India's fuel demand slumped in May to its
lowest since August last year, with a second COVID-19 wave
stalling mobility and muting economic activity in the world's
third largest oil consumer.
(Reporting by Jessica Jaganathan; Editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman and Jason Neely)
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