Oil trades near seven-month low

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Published Jun 15, 2017

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London - Oil traded near the lowest closing level in seven

months as US gasoline supplies unexpectedly rose for a second week.

Futures were little changed in New York after slumping 3.7

percent Wednesday, the first drop in four sessions. Motor-fuel stockpiles expanded

by 2.1 million barrels last week, the Energy Information Administration

reported. Most analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had forecast a decline. Crude

output climbed while nationwide inventories fell less than predicted.

Oil has declined almost 8 percent this month amid

speculation that rising US supplies will offset output curbs by the

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, including Russia.

New production from OPEC rivals will be more than enough to meet demand growth

next year, the International Energy Agency said Wednesday in its first

forecast for 2018.

“Any build in US commercial stocks gives us an indication of

the uphill battle OPEC is facing,” said Tamas Varga, an analyst at PVM Oil

Associates Ltd. in London. “Although last week the big bearish surprise came in

the form of significant builds across the board, this time around gasoline was

responsible for the consequences.”

Read also:  Oil trades near one-month low 

West Texas Intermediate for July delivery was at $44.70 a

barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 3 cents, at 10:01 a.m. London

time. Total volume traded was about 46 percent above the 100-day average.

Prices dropped $1.73 to $44.73 on Wednesday, the lowest close since Nov. 14.

Brent for August settlement was up 10 cents at $47.10 a

barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. Prices slid $1.72, or

3.5 percent, to $47 on Wednesday. The global benchmark crude traded at a

premium of $2.14 to August WTI.

US crude stockpiles dropped by 1.66 million barrels last

week, the EIA reported Wednesday. Inventories were forecast to decline by 2.45

million, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. Production

rose by 12,000 barrels a day to 9.33 million barrels a day. 

Oil-market news

The Qatar crisis is reverberating in Libya, inflaming

political divisions in the war-torn oil exporter and dragging commodity-trading

giant Glencore Plc into a dispute over crude sales. Iraq is driving

up  crude-oil exports to the US, the world’s second-biggest import

market, just as there are signs Saudi Arabia is honoring a pledge to restrict

such deliveries, according to tanker-trackin.

BLOOMBERG

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