Crude supply data reveals tighter inventory, leading to oil price surge

Crude supply data reveals tighter inventory, leading to oil price surge

SummaryCompaniesUS crude inventories fall more ​than expected – ⁢EIASaudi⁤ official selling prices for October likely to riseGabon coup ‌prompts supply worriesChina diesel exports seen rising to over 1 mln⁢ tons ⁤in SeptemberNEW YORK, Aug 30 (Reuters) – Oil prices gained on Wednesday​ as U.S. government data ​showed tighter-than-expected crude supplies, while concerns about the Chinese economy ‍limited gains.Brent crude futures for October rose 37 cents to settle at $85.86 a​ barrel.‍ The October⁣ contract expires⁢ on ‌Thursday and‍ the more active November contract was up 33 cents at $85.21.U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures gained 47 cents to $81.63.On Tuesday,‍ both benchmarks rallied by more than ​a ⁢dollar as the U.S.​ dollar weakened after soft ​jobs data reduced ⁣the likelihood of further ⁤interest rate hikes.U.S. crude inventories (USOILC=ECI) fell by 10.6 million barrels in‌ the last⁣ week​ to 422.9 million barrels, Energy Information Administration data showed on Wednesday. Analysts in a‌ Reuters poll ​expected‌ a 3.3 million-barrel⁤ drop.Product supplied of finished motor gasoline -‌ a ​proxy for demand – was‍ at about 9.1 million barrels per day.”I would expect⁢ (gasoline demand) to fall precipitously from here,” said John ‌Kilduff, a ‍partner at Again Capital, as gasoline ⁢demand typically peaks in the summer driving season.Investors kept an ​eye on Hurricane ⁢Idalia, which came ashore as a Category 3 storm on Wednesday ⁤morning in a Florida region where the northern panhandle curves into the peninsula. By ‌midday, the ‌hurricane approached ‌southeastern Georgia as a Category 1 storm.Elsewhere, analysts expect Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, ‍to extend its voluntary ⁢output cut into October, keeping ⁣oil supply⁣ tight.Based⁤ on that expectation, refining sources surveyed ⁣by Reuters forecast that Saudi Arabia’s official selling prices for all crude grades sold to‌ Asia in ‌October will ⁢be⁤ raised to their highest this year.Meanwhile, the military seized power in Gabon on Wednesday, which could hit the country’s crude supplies and tighten the market further.‌ Gabon exported a monthly average of 160,000 barrels ‍per day to Asia from May to July, Kpler ship-tracking data showed.Oil’s gains were capped, ⁢however, by concern over the mixed economic situation in China,⁣ the world’s biggest oil importer.Chinese ‌refiners are poised to boost‌ diesel exports in⁤ September to more ‍than 1 million metric tons, drawn by‌ lucrative margins from selling overseas⁢ and as ​they expect to receive more export quotas ‍from Beijing, traders and​ analysts⁢ said.”The market’s interpretation is if‌ they are exporting this ​much product ​then things are not going⁤ so well⁢ with the Chinese⁣ economy,” said Andrew Lipow, president at Lipow Oil Associates in Houston.Despite production cuts⁣ from Saudi Arabia, Russia and others, other exporters like Venezuela and Iran‌ are filling some of the gap, said Ole‌ Hansen, head of commodity strategy ⁤at Saxo Bank.”Ongoing ‌demand concerns ‍may prevent prices from…

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