Oil prices steadied on Tuesday after sharp falls
the session before to the lowest in about three weeks as a stronger U.S.
dollar and a drop in Chinese refining runs hit the market.
U.S. shale oil production is
expected to grow for its ninth consecutive month in September to 6.15
million barrels per day, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said
on Monday.
Global
benchmark Brent crude futures LCOc1 were up 3 cents, or 0.1 percent, at
$50.76 at 0551 GMT. That was just above the contract's 100-day moving
average, briefly breached in the previous session.
Oil
prices tumbled more than 2.5 percent on Monday in volatile trade as the
dollar strength and the demand concerns in China, the world's
second-largest oil user, weighed on sentiment. A stronger dollar tends
to limit the demand for oil for buyers paying in other currencies. Both
Brent and WTI had reached two-month highs on Aug. 10.
Chinese oil refineries operated in July at their
lowest daily rates since September 2016, official data showed on Monday,
to ease brimming inventories as state-owned oil giants faced off
independents in a retail petrol price war.
The
dollar firmed on Tuesday after North Korea's leader signalled that he
would delay plans to fire a missile near Guam, further easing tensions
and prompting investors to move back into riskier assets.
The
dollar index .DXY, which measures the greenback against a basket of six
major currencies, climbed 0.4 percent on Monday and was up 0.1 percent
on Tuesday.
An announcement by the Nigerian subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L) that it had lifted a force majeure on Bonny Light crude exports also added to market surplus woes.
Oil
prices had earlier on Monday been supported by reports that Libya's top
oilfield had cut its output by 30 percent on security concerns.
U.S. crude
stockpiles USOILC=ECI likely fell for the seventh consecutive week,
along with a probable fall in distillate and gasoline inventories last
week, a preliminary Reuters poll showed.
The
weekly U.S. crude inventory report from the industry group American
Petroleum Institute (API) is due out later on Tuesday. Official U.S.
government statistics will be released on Wednesday.
Efforts
by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other oil
producers to limit output have helped lift Brent past $50 a barrel, but
concerns remain that these efforts could be undermined by producers in
the U.S. and other countries.

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