Hannes Loacker News
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West Texas Intermediate crude fell, capping its biggest weekly drop in more than a month, after rising U.S. durable goods orders bolstered concern that the Federal Reserve will scale back stimulus efforts.
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West Texas Intermediate headed for its biggest weekly drop in more than a month amid signs of rising U.S. oil inventories and a global economic slowdown.
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West Texas Intermediate fell, halting a two-day advance as a report showed stockpiles of U.S. crude increased to the highest level since 1981.
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Oil declined in New York on speculation that last week’s surge, the biggest in three years, may have been excessive amid signs of slowing growth in China and a deepening slump in Europe.
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West Texas Intermediate crude was poised for a second weekly gain, while Brent headed for a loss, narrowing the discount between the two benchmarks.
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Crude oil traded little changed as a weakening dollar offset concerns that U.S. inventories are continuing to increase and credit-rating downgrades on Greece and Portugal may stall global fuel demand recovery.
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Oil traded near the lowest closing level in two days in New York before data that may show inventories rose to an 11-month high in the U.S., the world’s biggest consumer of the commodity.
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Oil rose in New York before a report forecast to show U.S. crude supplies dropped last week.
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Oil climbed from the lowest price in more than two weeks in New York on forecasts that gasoline supplies are falling and employment increasing in the U.S., the world’s biggest consumer of crude.
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Brent crude retreated from its highest closing level in more than four months in London as the prospect of renewed talks between western governments and Iran spurred speculation that last week’s gains were excessive.
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