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Oil Edges Higher With Global Equities and Middle East in Focus


(Bloomberg) — Oil edged higher after a three-day climb, with prices supported by gains in wider financial markets and lingering risks in the Middle East.

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Brent crude traded above $79 a barrel after climbing 2.4% over the prior three sessions, with futures potentially set for longest winning run since September. West Texas Intermediate was near $74. A rally in global stocks is helping to support appetite for risk assets, including crude, even as the Federal Reserve plays down the chance of imminent interest-rate cuts.

In the Middle East, Iranian-backed Houthi militants have continued to fire missiles at vessels off the coast of Yemen, forcing many tankers to make costly diversions. Elsewhere, the US killed the commander of an Tehran-backed militia in Iraq with an airstrike in retaliation for the deaths of three soldiers.

Oil has been confined to a relatively narrow range since the start of the year. Prices have been supported by the tensions in the Middle East, as well as supply cuts implemented by the OPEC+ group of producers including Saudi Arabia and Russia. That’s been offset, however, by booming production and record exports from the US, as well as slowing global demand growth.

Oil is ignoring bearish signs “and sticking to the notion of a ‘soft landing’ and deficient supplies in the second half,” said Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market analyst at brokerage Phillip Nova Pte.

Crude market spreads still signal near-term strength in the global market, with the gap between Brent’s two nearest contracts holding in a bullish, backwardated structure. WTI’s prompt spread, however, is 7 cents a barrel in a opposite contango pattern, signaling looser conditions.

In Asia, the outlook in top importer China remains challenging. Consumer prices in January fell at the fastest pace since 2009, as the Asian nation struggles to shake off deflationary pressures. Producer prices, meanwhile, have been stuck in deflation for 16 consecutive months.

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