Published
SINGAPORE (Reuters) –
Oil futures were higher ahead of the weekend but remained on track for large
weekly losses on fears that slower global economic growth will hurt fuel
demand, even as Saudi Arabia said it has fully restored oil output after recent
attacks.
Brent crude oil futures
rose 28 cents, or 0.5%, to $57.99 a barrel by 0450 GMT, while US West Texas
Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose 29 cents, or 0.6%, to $52.74.
“Asia will probably see some buying emerge over the session as traders hedge
potential weekend geopolitical risk, although the session should be quiet with
China still on holiday,” said Jeffrey Halley, a senior market analyst at OANDA
in Singapore.
For the week, Brent
futures were down 6.3%, marking its largest weekly loss since July. WTI was
down 5.7% for the week, also its biggest decline since July.
“The recovery from the initial sell-off looked more a case of hope rather than reality,” said Halley.
“The recovery from the initial sell-off looked more a case of hope rather than reality,” said Halley.
Weak US services sector
and jobs growth data on Thursday added to worries about global oil demand and
exacerbated fears that a protracted US-China trade war could push the global
economy into a recession.
“Concerns about global
oil demand are rising, and next week’s US-China trade talks, the significant X
factor, will be particularly important, given the sharp drop in the oil price
over the last week,” said Stephen Innes, Asia Pacific market strategist at
AxiTrader.
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