Oil gains ahead of US jobs data
Oil gains ahead of US jobs data
London: Oil prices rose on Friday ahead of a US jobs report which could point to a stronger economic outlook for the world’s largest oil consumer.
Brent crude futures rose 52 cents to $114.01 per barrel by 3:30pm. US crude rose 39 cents to $95.92.
Oil lagged other risk-sensitive assets like equities for a second day, failing to draw as much support from a European Central Bank’s bond buying plan unveiled on Thursday, with analysts pointing to high prices limiting demand.
“Oil demand continues to be hurt by high prices, it’s difficult to buy at these levels because you are buying demand destruction," said Olivier Jakob, at Petromatrix in Zug, Switzerland.
Data on Thursday showed US private employers added a stronger-than-expected 201,000 jobs in August and new claims for jobless benefits fell last week to the lowest level in a month, an upbeat signal for a struggling labour market.
This helped to ease fears that the closely watched farm payrolls would show a slower increase of jobs than the previous month at 125,000.
POSSIBLE SPR RELEASE
Traders were also watching for a possible release of emergency oil reserves by the US and other major economies, which could lead to downward pressure on prices.
Obama administration officials met oil market experts on Thursday as the White House considers the merits of another release.
Government officials did not reveal any plans to tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), but voiced concern about tightening US fuel supply and sounded out experts on how energy prices could behave in coming months, sources said.
US crude oil stockpiles fell more sharply than forecast last week as Hurricane Isaac hit the US Gulf region and temporarily shut down production platforms, refineries and ports, government data showed on Thursday.
Domestic stocks of crude, excluding oil held in the SPR, fell 7.43 million barrels to 357.1 million in the week ended Aug. 31, the Energy Information Administration reported. Analysts in a Reuters poll had forecast a drop of 5.3 million.
Energy production restarts continued in the Gulf of Mexico after Hurricane Isaac.
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