Oil prices subdued in Asia after touching 2016 highs | Inquirer Business

Oil prices subdued in Asia after touching 2016 highs

/ 12:32 PM May 12, 2016

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SINGAPORE, Singapore—Oil prices dipped in Asia on Thursday as investors locked in profits after the previous day’s surge to six-month highs that was fuelled by a surprise decline in US stockpiles.

The Department of Energy said Wednesday that inventories slid 3.4 million barrels last week, confounding analysts’ expectations for a rise and signalling strong demand in the world’s top oil-consuming nation.

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The report also said US oil production fell, providing hope to a market burdened by a stubborn global supply glut.

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At around 0345 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in June was down 13 cents, or 0.28 percent, at $46.10 and Brent crude fell 16 cents, or 0.34 percent, at $47.44 a barrel.

WTI jumped 3.5 percent Wednesday while Brent climbed 4.6 percent, putting both contracts around levels not seen since November.

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Traders “maybe feel that prices have moved up too much. Sometimes they are trying to get to a certain level where they can sell and then lock in profits”, said Bernard Aw, an analyst with IG Markets Singapore.

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News of the unexpected decline in US commercial crude stockpiles “had more of an impact on prices because they (traders) were expecting an increase in the inventories”, he added.

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While the fundamentals of oversupply and weak demand remain, Aw said short-term disruptions such as the wildfires in Canada’s oil-rich Alberta region and the closure of a key Shell pipeline in Nigeria following a leak are boosting prices.

“If you look at the current trend for oil, it has been steadily climbing. But overall, the fundamental picture has not materially changed,” he said.

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EY oil and gas analyst Sanjeev Gupta said: “In the near term, the market will seek clues from the upcoming eurozone economy data as well as key (economic growth) and inflation statistics from Japan and the US.”

A meeting of the OPEC oil cartel on June 2 in Vienna would also impact the market, he added.

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