SINGAPORE
Oil prices extended
gains in Asia to trade at 2015 highs Wednesday as fresh tensions in oil
producer Libya raised concerns about a supply disruption in the Middle
East, analysts said.
US benchmark
West Texas Intermediate for June delivery gained 87 cents to $61.27,
while Brent crude for June rose 63 cents to $68.15 in afternoon trade.
WTI jumped $1.47 in New York while Brent closed up $1.12 in London. Both finished at levels unseen since early December.
"Geopolitical
concerns in the Middle East continue to form a firm base for oil
prices, be it Libya, Yemen or Iraq," Nicholas Teo, market analyst at CMC
Markets in Singapore, told AFP.
REDUCED PRODUCTION
Media reports on Tuesday said protests in Libya had shut oil deliveries to a port in the east of the country.
Fighting
since 2011 in OPEC member Libya has seen output reduced from a high of
almost 1.5 million barrels a day to around 150,000 a day, according to
analysts.
Oil prices have in recent
weeks also gained some support due to ongoing strife in Yemen, whose
coast forms one side of the Bab el-Mandeb Strait through which some 4.7
million barrels pass each day.
Analysts
said dealers are awaiting the latest US crude stockpiles report for
clues to the state of production in the world's top crude consumer.
Oil
prices rose last week after the US Department of Energy's inventory
report showed a 500,000 barrel drop in petroleum stocks to 61.7 million
barrels at the Cushing, Oklahoma trading hub, the first such decline
since late November.
Traders took the
decline as a sign producers are cutting back at key US petroleum sites,
raising hopes this could pave the way for an easing of a global supply
glut.
Overall US crude inventories likely rose by 1.5 million barrels through May 1, according to a Bloomberg News survey.
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