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Oil prices rise by more than 2% following the Ukrainian attack on a Russian oil depot

The oil prices increased by more than 2% after an attack by a Ukrainian drone on a depot of crude oil in the Russian Black Sea Port of Novorossiysk.

Brent crude futures increased $1.34 or 2.13% to $64.35 a bar by 0227 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude rose $1.40 or 2.39% to $60.09 a bar.

According to a Telegram post by the operational headquarters for Krasnodar Region, drone fragments struck three apartments, an oil depot and coastal structures in a complex of trans-shipment.

The benchmarks remained unchanged on Thursday, as fears of looming Russian sanctions countered worries about the global oversupply which had driven the contracts lower by more than $2 per barrel the previous session.

As part of their efforts to get the Kremlin into peace talks on Ukraine, the U.S. has imposed sanctions against Russian oil companies Lukoil & Rosneft. The sanctions prevent transactions with Russian companies after November 21,

JPMorgan reported on Thursday that the U.S. sanctions imposed against Rosneft, Lukoil and other Russian oil companies have slowed down tanker unloading. This has led to an increase of around 1.4 million barrels of oil per day, which is almost a quarter of Russia's potential seaborne exports.

After the November 21 deadline for receiving oil from sanctioned companies the bank said that unloading cargoes may become more difficult.

Brent and WTI Futures dropped more than $2 per barrel on Wednesday, after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) said that global oil supplies will slightly exceed demand by 2026. This is a change from the earlier projection of a deficit.

Haitong Securities reported that after Wednesday's crash, the markets stabilized to reassess crude oil outlook.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported on Thursday that crude oil stocks in the United States rose more than expected last week. However, gasoline and distillate stockpiles fell less than anticipated.

The EIA reported that crude inventories increased by 6.4 millions barrels, to 427.6million barrels during the week ending November 7. This was compared to expectations from a poll of a rise of 1.96million barrels. (Reporting and editing by Tom Hogue; Sam Li, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)