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Brent steadies above US$58.50 after China data; strong dollar hurts
A customer selects products at a supermarket in Shanghai, in this February 10, 2015 file photo. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

SINGAPORE, March 10 — Brent crude gave up most of its early gains and steadied above US$58.50 (RM216.40) a barrel today, supported by data showing annual consumer inflation in top energy consumer China recovered last month while a firmer dollar kept a lid on prices.

China, which is battling growing deflationary pressures, saw consumer inflation rise 1.4 per cent in February, beating the 0.9 per cent gain estimated by analysts. A slide in producer prices, however, underscored the deepening weakness in the economy.

“The consumer price index figure is mildly positive” for oil prices, said Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at Sydney’s CMC Markets. It means that demand in China was “a little bit better than expected”, Spooner added.

Brent was trading at US$58.56 by 0142 ET, up 3 cents, after climbing to US$58.72 earlier in the day. It fell 4.6 per cent last week in its biggest decline since the week ended January 9.

US crude gained 11 cents to US$50.11 after finishing up around 1 per cent yesterday. The benchmark was underpinned by a report from market data firm Genscape that showed a modest stock build last week at the Cushing, Oklahoma delivery point, traders said.

Investors are now waiting for weekly US inventory reports from industry group, the American Petroleum Institute and the US Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration this week for further price direction.

According to a Reuters survey, US crude stocks are set to extend their record build for a ninth week.

Investors are waiting for inventory data from the US, said Ken Hasegawa, commodity sales manager at Tokyo’s Newedge Japan.

“Oil prices may soften if there is an increase in stocks in the US - we can expect a continued increase of inventories,” Hasegawa said.

“Brent and WTI continue to trend sideways, with WTI facing more volatility. Brent has been descending for the past few days and we believe that it is hovering near a support level,” said Singapore’s Phillip Futures in a research note today.

A firm dollar, which rose to a fresh 11-1/2 year top today against a basket of currencies, continued to check oil price gains as it makes commodities priced and traded in the greenback expensive for holders of other currencies.

The impact of the dollar on oil prices is more than that of the on-going geopolitical tensions, analysts said.

Investors have priced geopolitical tensions in the Middle East into current oil prices, Spooner said. — Reuters

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