By Ron Bousso has posted by Oil prices rebound in post-Brexit bargain hunting
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices topped $48 a barrel on
Tuesday as investors took advantage of a two-day slide in crude
triggered by Britain's vote to leave the European Union.
The vote's impact on oil, despite sending global stocks
and currencies spiralling, has so far been limited due to expectations
of strong summer demand in Asia and the United States and tightening
supplies after a two-year rout.
A looming strike at several Norwegian oil and gas
fields which threatened to cut output in western Europe's biggest
producer also helped support prices on Tuesday.
Brent crude futures were up 2.5 percent, or $1.17, at $48.33 per barrel at 1116 GMT.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures were 2.6 percent higher, up $1.22 at $47.55 a barrel.
A report by industry monitor Genscape that showed a 1.3
million barrel fall in crude inventories at the benchmark's pricing hub
in Cushing, Oklahoma, added further support, brokerage PVM said.
Sterling and London's FTSE 100 stock market index also
rose on hopes of a coordinated central bank response to financial market
losses.
"Oil is recovering on some bargain hunting after the
drop below $47 a barrel proved unsustainable and news of a possible
strike in Norwegian oil and gas industry," said Commerzbank analyst
Carsten Fritsch.
He said the turmoil in Europe was not expected to have a "meaningful impact on the physical global supply and demand balances".
Over its two previous sessions oil fell more than 7
percent to seven-week lows as the Brexit vote cooled investor appetite
for volatile commodities such as oil.
A strike in Norway, which could start on Saturday,
would add to a number of production outages in oil-producing countries
including Nigeria.
Still, news that a successful ceasefire in Nigeria had allowed repairs to oil pipelines weighed on the market, ANZ Bank said.
Oil production in Nigeria has risen to about 1.9
million barrels per day from 1.6 million, a state oil company spokesman
said on Monday.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; editing by David Clarke and Jason Neely)
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