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Wednesday, 23 September 2015

Oil up to $50 as U.S. stock-draw balances China data



• U.S. crude inventories fall 1.5 mln barrels - EIA

• China factory PMI falls to 6-1/2-year low

• Weakening Chinese economy to hit global oil demand

The price of Brent crude oil jumped more than 2 percent to $50 a barrel on Wednesday as a drawdown in U.S. crude oil stocks outweighed the negative impact of weak economic manufacturing data from China.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration said U.S. crude inventories fell 1.9 million barrels to 453.97 million last week, exceeding analysts expectations of a draw of 500,000 barrels. [EIA/S]
The data was broadly in line with a report on Wednesday by the American Petroleum Institute (API), which had said U.S. crude stockpiles fell 3.7 million barrels last week.
Although total U.S. oil inventories are near record highs, the draw suggests a rebalancing of the world's biggest domestic oil market is under way as oil production slows in the face of low prices.
"We had a bigger draw down in crude than expected," said Oliver Sloup, director of managed futures at Chicago-based iiTrader.com. "The draw down is giving us a bit of a boost and that's prompted some short covering."
Benchmark Brent for November was up $1.00 a barrel at $50.08 by 1445 GMT. U.S. light crude for November <CLc1> traded up 65 cents at $47.00.
The U.S. industry data helped oil resist the negative impact of a sharp contraction in Chinese manufacturing, which darkened the outlook for the world economy.
Flagging demand is dragging China's factory sector into its sharpest contraction in 6-1/2 years, a private survey showed on Wednesday, triggering a flight to safety in Asian markets that analysts say could extend across the globe.
The preliminary Caixin/Markit China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index fell to 47.0 in September, its lowest since March 2009. Levels below 50 show a contraction.
Oil prices have been weak for over a year and are now less than half their peak levels in 2014 thanks to massive oversupply by oil producers in the Middle East and North America.

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