Crude futures edge up, but US inventory build drags

Reuters Updated - January 22, 2018 at 03:19 PM.

Traders work in the crude oil and natural gas options pit on the floor of the New York Mercantile Exchange in New York in this April 25, 2011 file photo. Business sentiment at Asia's top companies fell in the second quarter, hitting its lowest since the third quarter of 2010 as rising costs and growing doubts over the strength of the global economy weighed, a Reuters survey showed. Weak U.S. economic data, a debt crisis in the euro zone and worries about inflation and tighter monetary policy in Asia have clouded the outlook for the global economy, denting sentiment across the board. To match ASIA COMPANIES/SENTIMENT REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/Files (UNITED STATES - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS)

Oil futures inched up on Thursday after losses the previous session on official figures showing a sixth consecutive week of inventory gains in US crude stockpiles.

Oil prices slumped as much as nearly 4 per cent on Thursday after the Energy Information Administration said US crude inventories added 2.85 million barrels last week, in line with forecasts, despite a drop in imports to the lowest level since 1991.

US crude was up 2 cents at $46.34 a barrel by 0745 GMT. It fell $1.58, or 3.3 per cent, to $46.32 on Wednesday.

Brent crude rose 9 cents to $48.67 a barrel, after dropping 3.9 per cent the day before.

"The US data was a negative and there is not much chance of further improvement at this stage in the demand/supply balance, with inventories heading up and production basically steady," said Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney.

Contributing to the general bearish sentiment was an internal OPEC document published by Reuters that showed weaker demand in the next few years for oil from the producer group.

OPEC oil ministers are due to meet on December 4 to decide whether to extend the strategy of allowing prices to fall to slow higher-cost rival supply.

Since November 2014, when the group adopted that policy, OPEC production has risen but prices have deepened their collapse, hurting oil revenue, with Saudi Arabia, the biggest producer, pumping near record levels to protect market share.

OPEC, along with Russia, is unlikely to change the strategy, BMI Research said in a note on Thursday.

"Our view remains that OPEC and Russia will continue on their strategy of producing as much oil as possible to squeeze out higher cost producers," BMI said.

"With oil production of major producers strong, falling output from US shale will be insufficient to balance the oversupplied oil market over the next two years," it said.

Published on November 5, 2015 04:47