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Oil prices rise on signs that Europe and China are increasing their demand and US production is decreasing

Prices rose on Wednesday as buyers returned to the market after the prices had fallen to new lows the previous week.

Brent crude futures rose 37 cents a bar, or 0.6% to $62.52 a bar by 1215 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was at $59.53 a bale, up 44 cents or 0.74%.

The benchmarks fell to a 4-year low following OPEC+’s decision to accelerate output increases. This stoked concerns of an oversupply, at a time that U.S. Tariffs are causing concern about demand.

The lower oil prices of recent weeks have led some U.S. companies like Diamondback Energy, Coterra Energy, and others to announce they will cut some rigs. Analysts say that this should increase prices over time by reducing production.

Daniel Hynes, senior commodity strategist at ANZ Bank, believes that the latest announcements suggest that output will decline in the months to come. Last month, we warned that the falling oil prices and decreasing drilling activity could lead to a fall in U.S. output.

Market sources cited American Petroleum Institute data on Tuesday to report that crude stocks dropped by 4.5 millions barrels during the week ending May 2.

The U.S. Government will release data about stockpiles at 10:30 am ET. ET (1430 GMT). The average expectation of the analysts polled is that U.S. crude stock will decline by 800,000 barrels for last week.

The signs that demand was improving also helped to support prices. China's consumers increased their spending on May Day and when the market returned from the holiday.

Analysts expect companies in Europe to report a 0.4% increase in their first-quarter earnings. This is an improvement from the 1.7% decline analysts expected just a week earlier.

As tariffs threaten the economy, it is expected that the Federal Reserve will leave interest rates unchanged Wednesday.

(source: Reuters)