(Reuters) - Oil
rose to $62 a barrel on Tuesday, close to its 2015 high, supported by
threats to Middle East supplies and expectations lower prices may prompt
a slowdown in U.S. output. Egypt on Monday bombed Islamic State targets in Libya,
where violence has reined in most oil output, and Iraq's
semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government threatened to withhold oil
exports if Baghdad failed to send its share of the budget. "The
oil price is finding additional support from renewed greater perception
of the risks to supply," said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commerzbank.
"In the short term, the momentum suggests that prices will climb
further." Brent crude LCOc1 rose 60 cents to $62.00 a barrel by 1101 GMT (06:01 a.m. EST). It reached a 2015 high of $62.57 on Monday. U.S. crude CLc1 was 43 cents higher at $53.21 a barrel. Oil
prices collapsed in the second half of 2014 on oversupply. The
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries refused to cut its
output, choosing to defend market share against U.S. shale oil and other
competing sources. Brent
has jumped by almost 40 percent in the last four weeks, supported by a
sharp fall in U.S. oil drilling. It had reached $45.19 on Jan. 13, the
lowest in almost six years, down from $115 in June. The
threat to Iraq's northern exports from the revenue dispute arises as
bad weather has cut Iraq's southern shipments this month. With
risks to Middle East supply back on the market's radar, International
Energy Agency Chief Economist Fatih Birol warned the rise of Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria presented a major challenge for the investment necessary to prevent an oil shortage in the next decade. "The
appetite for investments in the Middle East is close to zero, mainly as
a result of the unpredictability of the region," he said. Even
so, some analysts see the rally as overblown as the market remains
oversupplied. Crude inventories in top consumer the United States have
hit record highs for the last five weeks. "U.S. refinery outages, through seasonal maintenance and industrial action, will weaken U.S. crude
demand, exacerbating the crude stock excess in the near term," BNP
Paribas analysts Gareth Lewis-Davies and Harry Tchilinguirian said in a
report.
Oil rises to $62, near 2015 high as Mideast risks support
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Reuters
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