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Oil Climbs to 3-Week High as Trade Talks Fuel Demand Optimism

Oil holds above $48 on optimism about inventories and trade deal.

Oil Climbs to 3-Week High as Trade Talks Fuel Demand Optimism
A sample of crude oil sits in a glass flask during testing for chloride salt content in a laboratory, operated by Rosneft PJSC, in the Samotlor oilfield near Nizhnevartovsk, Russia. (Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Oil closed at a three-week high as U.S. negotiators touted progress in trade talks with China and investors gained faith that OPEC will shrink output.

Futures rose 2.6 percent to almost $50 a barrel in New York on Tuesday. Talks with China are “going very well,” U.S. President Donald Trump said in a tweet as the delegations in Beijing extended their meeting into Wednesday. Meanwhile, a post-market industry report was said to report substantial increases in American gasoline and diesel inventories, a bearish signal for crude demand.

“The market is clearly rebounding from sharply oversold territory,” said Michael Tran, commodities strategist at RBC Capital Markets LLC. “The macro outlook looks and feels a lot less dire than it did just a couple of weeks ago.”

Oil Climbs to 3-Week High as Trade Talks Fuel Demand Optimism

Oil hasn’t had this long a run of daily increases since the summer of 2017. Prices have advanced almost 12 percent in the last seven sessions, undoing almost half of 2018’s full-year loss. The rally’s been fueled by brightening economic outlooks as well as growing confidence that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, Russia and other allies will restrain production enough to avoid an oversupply.

West Texas Intermediate for February delivery traded up $1.26 to settle at $49.78 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest close since Dec. 17. Prices dipped to $49.70 within minutes of the American Petroleum Institute’s weekly tally of oil and fuel stockpiles.

The API was also said to report that U.S. crude inventories fell by 6.13 million barrels last week.

A separate government report scheduled for release on Wednesday is expected to show American crude stockpiles declined by 2.7 million barrels last week, according to the median estimate in a survey of analysts by Bloomberg.

Brent for March settlement gained 2.4 percent to settle at $58.72 on the ICE Futures Europe Exchange in London. The global benchmark crude traded at an $8.61 a barrel premium to WTI for the same month.

Other oil-market news:
  • Gasoline rose 1.6 percent to $1.3626 a gallon in New York trading.
  • Gunvor Group Ltd., one of the five biggest independent oil traders, named Stephane Degenne as head of crude trading amid a raft of senior management changes.
  • The Trump administration is working overtime to make sure the shutdown doesn’t halt oil drilling too -- in ways critics say may flout federal law.

--With assistance from Tsuyoshi Inajima, Sharon Cho and Grant Smith.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Nussbaum in New York at anussbaum1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, Joe Carroll, David Marino

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.