Oil prices rise ahead of U.S. stocks data

Reuters

Published Aug 22, 2017 10:01AM ET

Oil prices rise ahead of U.S. stocks data

By Christopher Johnson

LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on Tuesday, lifted by indications that supply is gradually tightening, especially in the United States.

Benchmark Brent crude (LCOc1) was up 30 cents at $51.96 a barrel by 1345 GMT. U.S. light, sweet crude (CLc1) was also 30 cents higher at $47.67.

"U.S. crude oil stocks have been falling consistently in recent weeks," said Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at futures brokerage Forex.com.

"If the downtrend in oil inventories is maintained, then a bullish case can be made for oil, especially given the ongoing supply restrictions from OPEC and Russia," he added.

U.S. commercial crude inventories have fallen by almost 13 percent from their March peaks, to 466.5 million barrels.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and non-OPEC producers including Russia have pledged to hold back about 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) of output between January this year and March 2018 in order to tighten supplies and prop up prices.

Oil prices found extra support from news that Libya's Sharara oilfield, the country's largest, shut on Tuesday just hours after reopening following a three-day pipeline blockade.

But oil production elsewhere has been rising.

U.S. crude production has broken through 9.5 million bpd, its highest since July 2015.

Some analysts say U.S. oil output growth will slow as energy firms cut the number of rigs drilling for oil.

So far, however, the increase in U.S. production has been relentless with increasing volumes from shale, particularly from the giant Permian basin in Texas and New Mexico.

"With U.S. shale oil production proving more than resilient, the autumn period presents a lot of downside risk to oil prices," Harry Tchilinguirian, chief oil market strategist at French bank BNP Paribas (PA:BNPP), told Reuters Global Oil Forum.

The weekly rollout of data on U.S. inventories starts later on Tuesday. Industry group the American Petroleum Institute will publish statistics on crude inventories and refinery operations for last week at 4:30 p.m. EDT (2030 GMT). [API/S]

On Wednesday, it will be the turn of the U.S. government's Energy Information Administration. [EIA/S]

U.S. crude inventories are expected to have fallen for an eighth straight week and drop by 3.4 million barrels, a Reuters poll shows.