Oil & Gas

Crude Oil increases towards $72 on demand prospects

Oil rose towards $72 a barrel on Friday, trading close to a two-year high as OPEC+ supply discipline and recovering demand countered concerns about patchy COVID-19 vaccination rollout around the globe. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies on Tuesday said they would stick to agreed supply restraints. A weekly supply report on Thursday showed U.S. crude inventories dropped more than expected last week.

Brent crude rose 33 cents, or 0.5%, to $71.64 a barrel by 0812 GMT. It reached an intra-day high of $71.99 on Thursday for its highest since May 2019. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was up 22 cents, or 0.3%, at $69.03.

โ€œAfter much dilly-dallying, Brent appears to have found a new home above $70. Summer and the reopening of the global economy is bullish for oil demand in the second half of the year,โ€ said Stephen Brennock of oil broker PVM.

For the week, Brent is on track for a gain of more than 2.8% and U.S. crude is heading for a 4% rise.

Also boosting oil this week was a slowdown in talks between the United States and Iran over Tehranโ€™s nuclear programme, which reduced expectations for a rapid increase in supply of Iranian oil to the market.

In focus later on Friday will be U.S. jobs figures for May. The consensus forecast for non-farm payrolls, due at 1230 GMT, is that about 6,50,000 jobs were added in May.

While rising demand and the fast pace of COVID-19 vaccinations in countries such as the United States has boosted oil, a slower inoculation rollout and high infections in the likes of Brazil and India are hitting demand in high-growth oil markets.

India, the worldโ€™s second most populous country, has vaccinated only 4.7% of the adult population and is reeling from a second wave of infections.

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