Oil rose further above $52 (39.96 pounds) a barrel
on Wednesday ahead of a U.S. inventory report expected to show crude
stocks dropped for a sixth week, although gains were capped by doubts
about compliance with OPEC-led supply cuts.
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OPEC exporter Saudi Arabia, keen to get rid of the glut, has shown one
of OPEC's highest rates of compliance and in September will cut crude
allocations to customers by at least 520,000 bpd, an industry source
said on Tuesday.
Crude
inventories last week fell by 7.8 million barrels, more than expected,
but gasoline stocks rose unexpectedly, data from the American Petroleum
Institute (API) showed on Tuesday before the release of Wednesday's
official numbers.
Brent crude, the global
benchmark, was up 21 cents at $52.35 at 0915 GMT, after two days of
decline. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude added 20 cents at
$49.37.
Wednesday's focus will be on the U.S.
government report at 1430 GMT to see whether it confirms the figures
from the API, an industry group. Analysts expect crude stocks to have
fallen by 2.7 million barrels and gasoline by 1.5 million barrels.
A
further drop in U.S. crude stocks would raise hopes that an OPEC-led
effort to wipe out a three-year, price-sapping supply glut is working.
The
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Russia and other
producers are cutting output by about 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd)
from Jan. 1 until March 2018.
The deal has
supported prices but an output recovery in Libya and Nigeria, OPEC
members exempt from the cut, has complicated the effort. U.S. shale oil
drillers have also ramped up production.
OPEC
officials met on Monday and Tuesday in Abu Dhabi in an effort to boost
producers' adherence to the supply cuts, which has been high on average
despite relatively low compliance by Iraq and the United Arab Emirates.

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