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Oil jumps 7% as markets rally


Reuters
First Posted 05:01:00 11/27/2008

Filed Under: Oil & Gas - Downstream activities, Markets & Exchanges

NEW YORK ? Oil prices jumped by more than seven percent to over $54 per barrel on Wednesday as the US stock markets rallied and giant energy consumer China cut interest rates.

The gain came despite bearish US government inventory data which showed an unexpectedly large rise in crude stocks last week as demand fell again.

US crude rose by $3.67 to end at $54.44 a barrel and London Brent crude rose $3.57 to settle at $53.92.

Oil has fallen by almost $100 a barrel since hitting a peak above $147 a barrel in July as the global credit crunch dented demand in large consumer nations.

"The stock market is trading higher, which is giving the few people who are in on this holiday week reason to push the [oil] market up," said Mark Waggoner, president of Excel Futures in California.

The United States was met with another carriage of gloomy economic data on Wednesday, with the latest Department of Commerce report showing that US consumers cut spending during October at the steepest rate in more than seven years.

US government data showed crude oil inventories rose 7.3 million barrels last week, compared with analysts' forecast of an 800,000-barrel increase as demand continued to slow.

US September oil demand fell by 12.8 percent versus year ago levels, to its lowest level in 12 years, according to EIA data.

Oil rose in early activity after China cut interest rates, boosting hopes that a prolonged slowdown in the world's fastest growing oil consumer can be avoided.

A Reuters poll of analysts forecast global crude demand will fall slightly in 2008 and 2009.

Analysts have also cut back on their price assumptions for next year, according to a separate Reuters poll.

US bank Merrill Lynch cut its oil price forecast for 2009 to $50 a barrel from $90 a barrel.

The oil market was also watching an informal meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in Cairo on Saturday.

OPEC ministers will likely debate a deep cut in oil supply amid the downward price spiral but were expected to hold off taking a decision until their policy-setting meeting in mid-December in Algeria.



Copyright 2012 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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