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Print Print edition: 2007-07-03

Oil steadies at $71

Published July 3, 2007 Updated July 3, 2007 12:00am

Oil prices steadied on Monday as traders looked ahead to a recovery in US refinery use to offset declining gasoline stockpiles. London Brent crude traded 3 cents higher at $71.44 a barrel by 0718 GMT, after gaining 89 cents on Friday. US light crude eased 4 cents to $70.64, after a $1.11 rally on Friday to the highest settlement since August 2006.
Oil traders worried about geopolitical supply risks saw London's Heathrow airport and New York's JFK terminal reopened on Sunday after bomb scares, following an explosion at a Scottish airport on Saturday and failed car bombing attempts in London.
"We can see some profit taking after short covering brought the market up to $71," said Ken Hasegawa at Himiwari CX in Tokyo. "The market will be rangebound until the US holiday."
The US Independence Day holiday on July 4 will delay until Thursday weekly US inventory data, in which some analysts expect to see higher US fuel production after several plants returned from maintenance.
ConocoPhillips planned to begin a restart of a gasoline-making unit in Texas on Friday, while two crude units at a BP refinery in Indiana, the country's fifth biggest, will reach full rates within two to three weeks after a fire slashed output in April.
A series of outages in the world's top consumer has helped drive down gasoline stockpiles during peak summer demand, though crude stockpiles have risen to nine-year highs despite Opec production cuts.
Oil market speculators trimmed their exposure to rising prices in the week to June 26, paring their net long gasoline and heating oil positions from the previous week's multi-year highs. Crude oil net length was almost unchanged.
Crude stockpiles in Cushing, Oklahoma - the delivery point for US crude futures - fell by 1.4 million barrels in last week's data, leaving the price gap between American and European oil benchmarks at under $1 a barrel after US crude has been trading at an atypical discount to Brent since February.
Iran's dispute with the West over the country's nuclear programme is still in focus after an Iranian official said on Saturday a team from the UN nuclear watchdog will visit Iran on July 11-13 for discussions.
Worries over Iran's nuclear dispute together with disruptions to Nigerian supplies, Opec supply curbs and growing fuel demand have left Brent oil prices up 17 percent this year.

Copyright Reuters, 2007

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