Oil rebounded on Wednesday following a report that the US stockpile dropped to its biggest one-week low this year.
The US crude inventories dropped by 5.2 million barrels last week,
according to the US Energy
Information Administration. This is more than
the 1.8 million-barrel predicted by analysts.
The Brent crude oil climbed 3 percent to $50.27 per barrel as at 6:15
Nigerian time. While, the US West Texas Intermediate oil surged to
$47.44 a barrel.
However, analysts have said it is hard to see how this one-off drop
in US production could change oil outlook and ease investors’ concerns
going forward.
“It is difficult to see how the day’s gains last,” said a partner at
hedge fund Again Capital in New York, John Kilduff. “US crude oil
production is now solidly above 9.3 million barrels per day with more to
come, and refined product, especially for gasoline, is oddly weak.”
Brent, against which half of the world’s oil is priced, has endured a
volatile past, plunging from more than $100 a barrel in 2014 to $26 in
February 2016.
While, it has since recovered mildly, there were concerns regarding
how OPEC would sustain current market price in the face of rising U.S.
production.
Experts have said other fundamentals within OPEC member nations have
to be addressed before another successful consensus could be reached.
For instance, a Foreign Exchange Research Analysts at Investors King
Ltd., Samed Olukoya said: “The rising oil production in Libya and
Nigeria could worsen current progress as both nations were exempted from
the ongoing production cut.”
The weakness in the oil price has impacted the oil sector, resulting
in about 400,000 job cut globally, while investment in the sector is at a
record low.
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