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Oil prices almost flat as market weighs Chinese demand, North America supply boost

Oil costs were little changed on Thursday as markets weighed new financial information from China against increasing supply from the Western Hemisphere.

Brent crude futures settled flat at $82.96 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate unrefined futures ended 20 cents lower at $78.93.

China's import and export growth beat quotes, recommending worldwide trade is turning a corner in a positive signal for policymakers as they attempt to shore up economic healing.

Even as China published a 5.1% rise in unrefined imports throughout the first to months of the year from a year previously, overall imports have actually been falling, continuing a pattern of softening purchases by the world's biggest buyer.

The import numbers were down substantially because they are not happy to pay complete rate for barrels, said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho. The absence of Chinese need stopped working to impress the marketplace, he said.

The global oil market is fairly well supplied with demand growth slowing down and supply increasing from the Americas, the head of the International Energy Firm's (IEA) oil markets and market department informed on Thursday.

Oil inventories in the U.S. increased recently for a 6th week in a row.

The market continues to be pulled around demand concerns in China, on the one hand, and increasing supply out of the Western Hemisphere, said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates.

The markets were bracing for the probability that the Federal Reserve could delay its first U.S. rate of interest cut to the second half of this year, which increased the dollar, according to a poll of foreign exchange strategists.

A strong greenback dents need for dollar-denominated oil amongst buyers using other currencies.

On Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the reserve bank still expects to reduce its benchmark rates of interest this year. On Thursday, the European Central Bank kept its main interest rate the same at 4.0% as expected.

Fuel consumption in India, the world's third-biggest oil importer and consumer, rose 5.7% year-on-year in February, assisted by strong factory activity.

(source: Reuters)