Oil prices steady

NEW YORK. – Oil prices steadied on Thursday, paring losses after a renewed drop in US oil rigs, but analysts and traders said there could be another sell-off in the coming week if US crude stockpiles hit record highs again. Earlier in the day, US crude futures slid 4 percent and Brent below $40 a barrel, extending bearish sentiment from Wednesday when the US government reported a crude inventory build three times above market expectations.

But data later on Thursday from oil services firm Baker Hughes, showing US oil drillers cutting 15 rigs this week after a pause last week, boosted sentiment. The US oil rig count now stands at 372, the lowest since November 2009.

US crude’s front-month contract CLc1 settled down 33 cents at $39,46 a barrel, recovering from a session low of $38,33. For the week, it rose two cents, finishing up for a sixth straight week.

Brent’s front-month LCOc1 settled down 3 cents on the day at $40,44 a barrel, after an earlier drop to $39,22. For the week, it fell 76 cents, or nearly 2 percent, its first decline in six weeks.

Despite the stumble, oil prices remain about 50 percent higher from multi-year lows hit in January from glut worries. While declining US oil output and strong gasoline demand were responsible for some of that recovery, the bulk of it was powered by major producers’ plans to freeze output at January’s highs.

While this week’s drop of oil 15 rigs was not a game changer to the market, it offered a reprieve to worries that there was a daily glut of some two million barrels in crude. – Reuters.

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