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Brent Holds At Around $59 As Saudis Say Oil Demand Is Up


“Markets are calm now ... demand is growing,” said minister Ali al-Naimi, the driving force behind OPEC’s shift in policy at its November meeting, when the group decided not to cut output to support prices but instead to fight for market share.

Brent has been helped by better-than-expected Chinese factory data, the Federal Reserve’s flexible stance on US interest rates and the euro zone’s approval of reforms proposed by Greece.

But US crude was weaker after settling lower for the fifth consecutive session on Tuesday on a bigger-than-anticipated crude stock build-up.

Brent LCOc1 had fallen 10 cents to $58.56 a barrel by 4.45 a.m. ET, while US crude futures CLc1 fell 30 cents to $48.98 a barrel.

China’s factory sector showed marginal expansion, according to the flash HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers’ Index. It inched to a four-month high of 50.1 in February, just above the 50 level that separates growth in activity from contraction. A Reuters poll of economists had forecast a reading of 49.5.

“That’s good news (as it means) potential oil demand, but I think the market needs to see more stable and concrete demand from China,” said Yusuke Seta, a commodity sales manager at Newedge Japan.

The same Chinese survey showed new export orders from the world’s second-largest oil consumer shrank at their fastest rate in 20 months.

Oil prices drew support from Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s suggestion that the US central bank was preparing to consider raising interest rates “on a meeting-by-meeting basis”. Some investors took that to mean rates may start rising later than June, the month on which markets had been focusing.

Still, concern about excess oil supplies weighed on the market, limiting the impact of positive macroeconomic news.

US crude inventories rose by 8.9 million barrels last week as refineries cut output, versus an expected 4 million barrels, data from industry group the American Petroleum Institute showed on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Libya has resumed pumping crude from the Sarir and Messla oilfields at a rate of around 40,000 barrels per day to the port at Hariga after power was restored.

  • Date

    25/02/2015