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Oil prices surge to new highs as the impact of tighter supply outweighs concerns over China’s demand.

Oil Hits‍ New Peaks as‍ Supply Cuts Offset Demand Concerns

By​ Alex Lawler

LONDON‍ (Reuters) – Oil hit new peaks on Wednesday with Brent crude touching ‍the highest since April as tighter ​supply owing to Saudi and⁤ Russian output cuts offset concerns ​over slow ​demand from China and a report‌ showing ⁢rising U.S. crude ‍inventories. ⁢

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Saudi Arabia’s cabinet said on Tuesday that it reaffirms its support for precautionary measures by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its ‌allies, known as OPEC+, to stabilise the market, ​state media reported.

Brent crude rose ⁤64 cents,​ or 0.7%, to $86.81 by 1012 GMT and touched $86.94, the highest since April 13. ⁢U.S. West Texas Intermediate⁤ (WTI)‍ crude gained 78 cents, or⁣ 0.9%, to $83.70. The U.S. benchmark touched $83.81, the highest ‌since ‌November 2022.

Crude posted its sixth consecutive weekly gains last week and hit its highest levels⁤ since mid-April on Monday, helped by a reduction in OPEC+ supplies ​and hopes of stimulus boosting oil demand recovery‌ in China.

“There is no doubt that there is plenty of momentum here,” said Naeem Aslam, chief investment officer at Avatrade. “The clear trend seems to be skewed to the upside.”

Some bearish pressure came from American Petroleum Institute (API) figures on Tuesday, which according to market sources ​showed U.S. crude stocks‍ rose by 4.1 million‌ barrels ⁢last week,​ although gasoline and distillate inventories fell.

“Prices remain stable‍ this morning despite economic headwinds helped ⁤by U.S. product draws reported by⁤ the API, albeit⁤ crude inventories built more than expected,” oil broker PVM said.

Official U.S. Energy Information Administration inventory figures are out at 1430 GMT.

On Tuesday, oil came under pressure from Chinese data showing crude oil imports in July fell 18.8% from the previous month to their lowest⁣ daily rate since January, although they⁤ were up ‌17% from a‌ year earlier.

But adding⁤ support, Saudi Arabia last week extended ​its ⁢voluntary production cut of 1 million barrels per day to the end of September and Russia said it would cut oil exports by 300,000⁢ bpd in September.

‍ (Additional reporting by Yuka Obayashi in Tokyo and Andrew Hayley in Beijing; editing by Jason ‌Neely and Bernadette Baum)

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