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Oil rises further above $68 a barrel on tighter market

January 10, 2018 00:00:00


LONDON, Jan 9 (Reuters): Oil rose further above $68 a barrel on Tuesday, touching its highest since May 2015, supported by OPEC-led production cuts and expectations US crude inventories fell for an eighth week.

The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies including Russia are keeping supply limits in place in 2018, a second year of restraint, to reduce a price-denting glut of oil held in inventories.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, was up 4.0 cents at $67.82 a barrel at 0949 GMT and earlier touched $68.29, its highest since May 2015. US crude rose 15 cents to $61.88 and also reached its highest since May 2015.

"Oil prices remain on an upward trajectory," said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commerzbank.

"In view of sharply falling US crude oil stocks and record-high compliance with the production cuts by OPEC, market participants are convinced that the market is continuing to tighten."

OPEC is cutting output by even more than it promised [OPEC/O] and the restraint is reducing oil stocks globally, a trend most visible in the United States, the world's largest and most transparent oil market.

Supply reports this week from industry group American Petroleum Institute and the US government's Energy Information Administration are expected to show US crude stocks fell by 4.1 million barrels, an eighth week of decline.

The API releases its data at 2130 GMT on Tuesday and the government report is out on Wednesday.

Many producers, still suffering from a 2014 price collapse, are enjoying the rally, although they are wary it will spur rival supply sources. Iran said on Tuesday OPEC members were not keen on increased prices.


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