Brent crude futures for September delivery rose 76 cents, or
0.77%, to $99.86 a barrel by 0929 GMT while WTI crude rose 28
cents, or 0.29%, to $96.06.
The U.S. Federal Resreve's most hawkish policymakers on Thursday
said they favoured a rate increase of 75 basis points at its
policy meeting this month, not the bigger increase traders had
priced in after a report on Wednesday showed inflation was
accelerating.
The interest rate uncertainty and weak economic data led to
Brent and WTI shedding more than $5 on Thursday to less than the
closing price on Feb. 23, the day before Russia invaded Ukraine,
though both contracts clawed back nearly all the losses by the
end of the session.
The U.S. official's comment on Saudi oil production comes at a
time when capacity at members of the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is running low, with most
producers pumping at maximum capacity.
U.S. President Joe Biden, meanwhile, is visiting Saudi Arabia to
attend a summit of Gulf allies and is expected to call for the
region to pump more oil.
"[Biden's] case will have been weakened significantly by the
latest price rout," said Stephen Brennock of oil broker PVM.
Analysts, meanwhile, expect to continued pressure on oil from
concerns over the global economy.
"Brent has dipped noticeably below $100 per barrel this week. It
is likely to continue sliding given that the recession fears
will presumably not abate for the time being," Commerzbank said
in a note.
Bearish market sentiment has also followed renewed COVID-19
outbreaks in China, which have hampered a demand recovery.
China's refinery throughput in June shrank nearly 10% from a
year earlier, with output for the first half of the year down 6%
in the first annual decline for the period since at least 2011,
data showed on Friday.
(Additional reporting by Jeslyn Lerh in Singapore and Laura
Sanicola in New YorkEditing by David Goodman)
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