Brent crude powered
back above $49 a barrel in Asia Friday as oil prices resumed their rise
after the dollar eased and militants blew up another pipeline in African
producer Nigeria. Crude Oil
A rally that pushed oil prices to a series of 2016 highs since last week
had taken a breather over the past two days after minutes of an April
meeting showed that the US Fed kept the door open to raising interest
rates in June, sending the dollar higher.
A stronger greenback puts downward pressure on oil, as it makes the
dollar-priced commodity more expensive, curtailing demand and depressing
prices.
At around 0615 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in
June was up 48 cents, or 1.00 percent, at $48.64 and Brent crude for
July gained 39 cents, or 0.80 percent, to $49.20.
Analysts said prices resumed their uptick after the dollar eased and
threats of supply disruptions returned to the fore following the bombing
of a gas pipeline owned by the Nigerian subsidiary of Italy’s Eni in
the latest attack on the country’s oil facilities.
Earlier, a new militant group called the Niger Delta Avengers(NDA)
carried out several attacks on key pipelines and facilities operated by
oil majors Shell and Chevron, hurting output in Africa’s biggest economy
and major crude producer.
Officials said Nigeria’s output had slumped to 1.4 million barrels per
day from 2.2 million because of the unrest.
The Nigeria disruptions come on top of a reduction in Canada’s output
due to wildfires threatening the country’s oil sands region.
“The pause in the dollar rally and continued concerns over supply
disruptions in Nigeria are supportive of oil prices,” said Bernard Aw,
an analyst with IG Markets in Singapore.
“In addition, Anas Al-Saleh, Kuwait’s acting oil minister… expects the
oil market to rebalance in the second half of this year as demand
increases. Therefore, it could be only a matter of time before crude
pushes beyond $50,” he told AFP.
US Federal Reserve policymakers meet from June 14-15, with investors
watching their decision on interest rates.
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries also meets on June
2 in Vienna, with the market fixed on whether they will take action to
reduce the global crude supply glut.
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