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The biggest weekly oil gain in three-months as Russia reduces fuel exports

The biggest weekly oil gain in three-months as Russia reduces fuel exports

The oil prices rose on Friday. They are on course to reach their highest level since early June, as Ukraine's attacks against Russia's energy infrastructure led Moscow to restrict fuel imports and to be close to cutting crude production.

Brent futures rose 13 cents or 0.2% to $69.55 per barrel at 0454 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures increased 22 cents or 0.3% to $65.20 per barrel.

Both benchmarks are up over 4% in the past week. This is their largest increase since the week ending June 13.

The gains were backed by the ongoing Ukrainian drone attacks targeting Russian oil infrastructure and NATO's warning that it was ready to respond if Russia violated its airspace in future. Also, Russia's decision to halt exports of key fuels is a support for these gains," IG analyst Tony Sycamore stated.

Alexander Novak, the Russian deputy prime minister, said that the country will introduce a partial export ban until the end the year on diesel and extend the existing export ban on gasoline.

Moscow is on the verge of reducing its crude production due to a decline in refinery capacity. There are fuel shortages in several Russian regions.

The NATO warning that it would respond to any further violations of airspace in its area has heightened tensions over the Russia-Ukraine conflict and increased the possibility of sanctions against Russia's oil sector, according to Daniel Hynes, analyst at ANZ.

This week, both benchmarks hit their highest levels since the beginning of August. The drop in U.S. crude oil inventories was a shock and Ukraine's attacks against Russia's energy infrastructure were also factors.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis of the Commerce Department released its latest estimate of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth in the United States at a rate of 3.8% annualized, which is an upwardly-revised rate, last quarter.

Stronger-than-expected economic data could make the Federal Reserve more cautious about cutting interest rates. Last week, the U.S. Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 25 basis points, its first reduction since December. It had also signalled that more cuts would be coming.

Prices were also impacted by the announcement made on Thursday by the Kurdistan Regional Government that oil exports will resume in 48 hours.

In a note, ANZ's Hynes stated that "Geopolitical Tensions reversed previous losses after a historic agreement was reached allowing the resumption exports from Iraqi Kurdistan. This could return up 500kb/d on the global market." (Reporting and editing by Edwina Gubbs and Kate Mayberry; Sudarshan Varadhan)

(source: Reuters)