Oil
prices extended their gains to multi-month highs Thursday following another
drop in US supplies and the prospect of further disruptions to output from key
producers Nigeria and Canada.
The commodity has almost doubled since hitting
near 13-year lows at the start of the year as a global supply glut has eased
thanks chiefly to a weakening dollar, signs of a pick-up in the world economy
and falling production from Nigeria and Canada.
On Wednesday the Department of
Energy said US commercial stocks fell much more than expected in the week to
June 3, fanning talk that demand is improving in the world’s biggest oil
consumer. “The inventory has been dropping for three consecutive weeks, showing
that the supply-demand relationship has leaned towards a balance,” CMC Markets
analyst Margaret Yang wrote in a note. At about 0645 GMT, US benchmark West
Texas Intermediate rose 26 cents, or 0.51 percent, to $51.49 a barrel, its
highest since July. Brent gained 14 cents, or 0.27 percent, to $52.65, its
highest since October. Expectations that the Federal Reserve will not raise
interest rates until September at the earliest has put downward pressure on the
dollar, making the black gold cheaper for anyone buying it with other
currencies.
The chances of output from Canada picking up in the near term a
slim as fires in northern Alberta, the country’s main oil producing region, led
to at least two companies shutting down production facilities. Canada is the
biggest supplier of oil to the United States. And in Nigeria, which is a member
of the OPEC exporters group, rebels have rejected a truce offer from the
government, fuelling fears they will continue attacks on installations that
have already halved the country’s output.
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