Oil jumps to fresh 6-month high as US inventories tumble
Steep rise in Dollar rate :
SINGAPORE: Oil climbed
to a six-month high above $84 for a second straight session after an
industry report showed declines in U.S. inventories across fuel
categories, a sign chronic oversupply may subside at the world's top
user.
U.S. crude for December gained 32 cents to $84.22 at 0249 GMT, after
touching $84.50 earlier on Wednesday, the highest intraday price since
May 4. ICE Brent rose 23 cents to $85.64.
Expectations the Federal Reserve will on Wednesday announce a fresh
round of expansionary monetary policy kept the dollar under pressure,
helping commodity prices, while Republican gains in the U.S. Congress
lifted sentiment in Wall Street.
U.S. crude inventories fell by 4.1 million barrels in the week to Oct.
29, the American Petroleum Institute (API) reported on Tuesday, before
the Energy Information Administration (EIA) releases official statistics
later on Wednesday. That compared with expectations for a 1.2 million
barrel increase.
"Overall, it's a bullish set of data, and sets a bullish outlook for the
EIA," said Serene Lim, a Singapore-based oil analyst at ANZ. "It could
be the beginning of the seasonal downward trend as we enter the winter
season in the Northern Hemisphere."
Distillates stockpiles, including heating oil and diesel, fell 4.7
million barrels, more than four times the expected 1.1 million barrel
draw in a Reuters survey, while gasoline supplies fell by 3.2 million
barrels, against forecasts of little change.
Strikes at French refineries limited European exports of gasoline to the
U.S., while west-to-east transatlantic distillates flows probably
increased as shortages loomed because of the walkouts, analysts said.
Oil prices at $100 a barrel would be more comfortable for producing
nations because of higher food prices and a weaker dollar, the top oil
official for OPEC member Libya said on Tuesday.
The Libyan comments came a day after Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali
al-Naimi said oil prices in a $70-$90 range were comfortable for
consumers, signaling a higher acceptable range from the $70-$80 range
previously deemed comfortable.
Qatar's oil minister also said $70-$90 per barrel would be reasonable
for consumers and producers.
Euro-zone manufacturing picked up its pace last month, a business survey
showed Tuesday, one day after better-than-expected U.S. and Chinese
factory data increased optimism about the global economy and revived
risk appetite.
"What we are looking at is economic numbers improving, but how this
translates into oil demand growth we may only see next year," Lim said.
"At the moment, the well-supplied story is still standing and we don't
see demand growth outpacing supply growth until next year."
The U.S. dollar stayed on the backfoot early in Asia on Wednesday, with
the euro holding above $1.4000 and the Aussie just off parity as the
Federal Reserve looked set to provide more stimulus to spur a flagging
recovery.
World stocks neared a two-year high on Tuesday on stronger-than-expected
economic data while the dollar fell as investors anticipated the U.S.
central bank will open the money spigot to spur the flagging U.S.
economy.
Republicans rolled up key early U.S. election wins on Tuesday after a
long and bitter campaign that could sweep Democrats from power in
Congress and slam the brakes on President Barack Obama's agenda.
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