Oil gains a second day as coronavirus optimism may mean demand rebound

Published 06/02/2020, 02:50
Updated 06/02/2020, 02:55
© Reuters.  Oil gains a second day as coronavirus optimism may mean demand rebound

TOKYO, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Oil futures rose for a second day

on Thursday as investors took optimism around unconfirmed

reports of possible medical advances to combat the coronavirus

outbreak in China as a sign fuel demand could rebound in the

world's biggest oil importer.

Prices also gained after a government report on Wednesday

showed U.S. gasoline and diesel inventories fell.

Brent futures rose by 62 cents, or 1.1%, to $55.90 a barrel

by 0142 GMT, having risen 2.4% in the last session. U.S. West

Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures gained 73 cents, or 1.4%, to

$51.48 a barrel after rising 2.3% on Wednesday.

Commodities, equities and other markets have been buoyed by

unconfirmed reports of a possible advance in producing treatment

drugs for the coronavirus that has shut down transport and

limited industrial activity in China. However, the World Health

Organization has played down the reports of "breakthrough" drugs

being discovered. MKTS/GLOB

Furthermore, an additional 73 people on the Chinese mainland

died on Wednesday from the virus, the highest daily increase

since the outbreak started, and another 3,694 new cases were

reported, raising the total to 28,018. In the U.S., gasoline stockpiles dropped last week, counter

to analysts' expectations for a gain, and diesel inventories

fell more than expected, the Energy Information Administration

reported. However, crude stockpiles rose USOILC=ECI rose by a

more-than-expected 3.4 million barrels last week to 435 million

barrels. EIA/S

"While small falls in U.S. product stocks suggest demand is

holding up, it would take a surge in U.S. consumption to even go

some of the way to offset the slump in China's consumption owing

to the outbreak of coronavirus," Capital Economics said.

Commodity supply chains in China have been disrupted to the

extent that short-term sales of crude oil, along with liquefied

natural gas, fell to nearly zero this week.

Buyers in China, the world's biggest importer of most

commodities, are considering taking legal action to avoid

honouring purchase agreements.

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