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Brent oil holds above $60 as lower inventories boost WTI

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LONDON: Oil prices moved in opposite directions on Thursday, with Brent easing but holding above $60 a barrel while a sharp fall in US inventories last week boosted WTI futures.


Brent crude was down 9 cents at $60.40 a barrel by 0919 GMT while West Texas Intermediate crude was up 29 cents at $56.07 a barrel.


“If the API (American Petroleum Institute) unexpectedly supplied bullets to oil bulls on Tuesday evening so that they could fire from all cylinders, the EIA flung the door of the ammunition depot wide open yesterday,” Tamas Varga of oil brokerage PVM said.


The US government’s Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday that American crude stocks dropped last week by 10 million barrels, while gasoline and distillate stocks each fell by 2.1 million barrels.


On Tuesday, industry body API said US crude stocks had fallen by 11.1 million barrels last week.


US weekly crude production rose 200,000 barrels per day to a new record at 12.5 million bpd in the week to August 23, the EIA said.


Concerns about a slowdown in economic growth due to the trade war raging between the United States and China, the world’s biggest oil consumers, along with the potential hit to oil demand, are keeping prices in check.


China’s commerce ministry said on Thursday China and the United States were discussing the next round of face-to-face trade talks scheduled for September, but hopes for progress hinged on whether Washington could create favourable conditions.


Concerns about the global economy have watered down the impact of oil production cuts that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Russia and other producers have been exercising over the past 2½ years. “When they (OPEC and its allies) really managed to accelerate the price from late 2016 onwards they had a big tailwind of global growth acceleration, now they have this big negative headwind of global growth de-acceleration,” said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst at Nordic bank SEB. — Reuters


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