SINGAPORE: Oil prices edged up on Wednesday, extending 2 percent gains recorded the previous day, on signs that markets are gradually tightening after years of oversupply, although the outlook for 2018 remained less certain.
US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were trading at USD 51.07 per barrel at 0127 GMT, up 15 cents, or 0.3 percent), from their last settlement. Their 2 percent rise the day before took them back above USD 50 a barrel.
Brent crude futures , the international benchmark for oil prices, were at USD 56.71, up 10 cents, or 0.2 percent, from their last close. Brent also rose 2 percent the previous day.
Traders said they would look to the US fuel inventory data on Wednesday and Thursday for indicators on price direction.
A US federal holiday on Monday delayed the release of weekly inventory numbers by a day. The American Petroleum Institute (API) is scheduled to release its data for last week at 2030 GMT on Wednesday, and the US Department of Energy`s report is due Thursday.
Overall, analysts said short-term conditions were tightening.
"We...raise our Q1 2018 (Brent) price forecast by USD 5 per barrel to USD 56," Barclays bank said. "Inventory draws will likely cause the market to refocus on geopolitical risks and low levels of spare capacity."
Price support is also coming from economic growth, which the International Monetary Fund forecast late on Tuesday would be 3.6 percent globally this year and 3.7 percent for 2018.
Brent has so far averaged USD 52.7 per barrel this year. By the end of the year, Barclays said it expected Brent to have averaged around USD 53 per barrel.
Despite this, Barclays said oil could dip again in 2018, with second-quarter 2018 Brent to fall back to USD 48 a barrel, thanks largely to rising global output.
A pact between the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other producers including Russia to cut output by 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) in order to prop up prices is due to expire by the and of March 2018.
Discussions to extend the pact are taking place, but production elsewhere is rising.
"It has...been a tricky year for OPEC," said Lukman Otunuga, analyst at futures brokerage at FXTM. "Although Saudi Aramco plans to make `the deepest customer allocation cuts in its history` by cutting 560,000 bpd next month, its impact could be diluted if the US shale producers see this as a Christmas gift."
US producers are not participating in any pledge to restrain supply, and output has risen by 10 percent this year to over 9.5 million bpd.
Speaking in an interview at the Reuters Global Commodities Summit, Ian Taylor, chief executive of top oil trader Vitol, said on Tuesday that US output would climb by another 0.5-0.6 million bpd next year before flattening out.
Overall, Taylor said, markets were "boringly rangebound" and that "margins are very, very tight".
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