US Crude Settles At 2-Year High After Pipeline Disruption
BOSTON, Nov 22 (Reuters) - Oil settled at a two-year high Wednesday after the shutdown of one of the largest crude pipelines from Canada cut supply to the United States.
The restart of the 590,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Keystone pipeline, shut last week due to a spill, could take several weeks. Operator TransCanada Corp has told clients it will cut deliveries on the pipeline linking Alberta's oil sands with U.S. refineries by 85 percent through the end of November.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) futures settled up $1.19, or 2 percent, at $58.02 per barrel, the highest since July 2015, on concerns over reduced supplies on the Keystone pipeline and after the American Petroleum Institute (API) late Tuesday reported a 6.4 million-barrel crude drawdown for last week.
Earlier in the session, crude surged to $58.09 and then pared gains after weekly government data showed crude inventories fell 1.9 million barrels, less than in the API report.
Crude stocks at the Cushing, Oklahoma, delivery hub for WTI futures fell by 1.8 million barrels, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said.
Brent crude settled up 75 cents, or 1.2 percent, at $63.32 a barrel.
"Current price levels are still inciting U.S. companies to produce more, which will remain a concern for the OPEC ahead of the cartel’s November meeting," said Abhishek Kumar, senior energy analyst at Interfax Energy's Global Gas Analytics in London.
U.S. energy companies this week added oil rigs, with the monthly rig count rising for the first time since July. Drillers added nine oil rigs in the week to Nov. 22, bringing the total count up to 747, General Electric Co's Baker Hughes energy services firm said. <RIG-OL-USA-BHI>
The front-month U.S. crude moved to a premium to the second-month <CL-1=R> for the first time in almost three years after reports of the Keystone delivery cuts. The bullish structure, known as backwardation, has not been seen since Dec. 19, 2014.
A backwardation prompts the selling of crude sooner, rather than storing it, which could encourage crude exports.
Additionally, exports could be incentivized by a wide discount for U.S. crude versus Brent crude. Brent's premium to WTI <WTCLc1-LCOc1> narrowed on Wednesday, falling by 49 cents or 8.5 percent to $5.21 a barrel but remained in the range sustained for the past three months, which have seen the widest premiums in two years.
"A wide price premium of Brent over WTI crude will encourage more exports of U.S. oil over the coming weeks,” Interfax's Kumar said.
“Going forward I think those export numbers are going to be what people are going to be watching," said Gene McGillian, vice president at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut. "The more oil we export in the global market, the more that offsets the effect of the OPEC and Russian cut."
U.S. supplies have been a key factor in determining how quickly a global supply overhang can be reduced. The tug-of-war between concerns over supply cuts due to the Keystone delivery cuts and more robust overall inventories shows how the oil market is grappling to untangle the U.S. supply picture.
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