
On Wednesday, oil prices rose slightly as the market awaited a weekly snapshot of crude stockpiles in the United States- the world’s biggest energy consuming nation.
New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in April gained 27 cents to 79.96 dollars a barrel at about 0930 GMT. Brent North Sea crude for April climbed 19 cents to 78.37 dollars a barrel.
Traders were turning their attention to an upcoming stockpiles report from the US Department of Energy (DoE). While analysts polled by Dow Jones expect the DoE report to show that US crude inventories rose by one million barrels last week and that distillate stocks declined by 700,000 barrels.
According to the poll results showed, the gasoline, or petrol, reserves are forecast to have risen by 700,000 barrels.
A report by the American Petroleum Institute (API) published on Tuesday showed that US crude reserves had risen by 2.67 million barrels in the past week while gasoline reserves increased 909,000 barrels. Distillate stocks, which include heating fuel, fell 4.07 million barrels.
Victor Shum, a Singapore-based analyst with energy consultancy Purvin and Gertz, said the crude build-up is certainly bearish so inventories remains high, and the (supply and demand) fundamentals will prevent pricing from being sustainable at the 80-plus dollar level.
Oil prices had closed higher Tuesday, buoyed by a weak greenback which makes dollar-priced crude cheaper for holders of foreign currencies, pushing up demand, said traders.
(Source: http://news.yahoo.com)
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