Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Oil jumps on stock market bounce, OPEC compliance

Oil prices rose 4 percent on Tuesday, tracking a bounce on Wall Street, after U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said he was committed to protecting the troubled banking sector.

Figures showing higher-than-expected compliance by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to its agreed production cuts encouraged the gains, dealers said.

U.S. crude oil rose $1.52 to settle at $39.96 a barrel, while London Brent crude rose $1.51 to $42.50 a barrel.




The gains came as U.S. stocks jumped about 3 percent, bouncing off of 12-year lows hit Monday, after Bernanke told U.S. lawmakers that he was committed to ensuring the economic viability of banks.

Uncertainty about the future of the U.S. banking system has raised concerns that the economic crisis could worsen, darkening an already gloomy outlook for U.S. energy demand.

Buying in the oil markets was encouraged by figures showing stronger-than-expected OPEC compliance with its production cuts.

Energy consultant Petrologistics said this week that OPEC producers were likely to pump less oil in February than January and a Reuters calculation based on the figures showed the cartel's compliance to its supply cut agreements was 89 percent.

"The OPEC compliance was bigger than expected," said Oliver Jakob of Petromatrix.




OPEC members are scheduled to meet March 15 in Vienna and are expected to consider deepening their output cuts.

Oil prices have dropped nearly $110 a barrel from their peak in July as the economic crisis cuts into demand.

Traders were awaiting U.S. oil inventory data on Wednesday that was expected to show a 1-million-barrel increase in crude stocks last week, a Reuters poll of analysts showed.

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