Investing.com – Crude oil was narrowly mixed in Asia on Friday with China trade figures and US data ahead to set the tone after rising last week and sentiment strong for stable to higher prices.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange crude futures for January delivery fell 0.12% to $56.62 a barrel, while on London’s Intercontinental Exchange, edged up 0.02% to $62.08 a barrel.
Japan reported third quarter GDP jumped 0.6%, compared with a 0.4% gain expected and at a 2.5% pace, compared with a 1.5% rise seen . As well, rose 0.6%, missing the 0.8% gain seen on year.
Later in China, trade data is expected to show a USD 35 billion surplus with imports up 11.3% and exports up 5.0% for November on year.
Overnight, crude oil prices settled higher on Thursday as a threatened strike in Nigeria and growing Middle East political tensions stoked fears of supply disruptions, while ongoing OPEC-led output curbs supported sentiment.
One of Nigeria’s two main oil unions on Thursday threatened to launch a nationwide strike from Dec. 18 should the government fail to force the management of domestic oil and gas companies to recall laid-off union members.
That added to fears of potential supply disruptions in the wake of growing Middle East political tensions after Saudi Arabia called for a review of US President Donald Trump’s decision to direct the State Department to begin preparations to move the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
The rebound in oil prices comes a day after crude settled nearly 3% lower on data showing US inventories of refined fuel rose sharply last week, pointing to possible weakness in demand. The uptick in gasoline supplies offset a larger-than-expected draw in crude stockpiles which fell for a third straight week, while production rose to a weekly record.
US oil production rose to its highest since the early 1980s as data US producers ramp up production to 9.7 million barrels per day last week. day last week.
Sentiment on crude oil remained bullish as market participants continue to expect output-led production curbs would rein in excess global supplies to OPEC’s five year-average.
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Source: Investing.com