Oil Rises in Low-Volume Session, Swayed by Broader Market Moves

Oil climbed in a low-volume trading session with receding financial fears and curtailed exports lending support.

(Bloomberg) — Oil climbed in a low-volume trading session with receding financial fears and curtailed exports lending support. 

Crude futures rallied alongside equities with below-average volumes leading crude to take cues from broader market sentiment. Prices were also propped by a dispute among Iraqi, Turkish and Kurdish authorities that halted about 400,000 barrels a day of exports from the Ceyhan port.

“The supply/demand equation looks to be favoring the increasing-demand side,” said Dennis Kissler, senior vice president of trading at BOK Financial Securities.  Low volumes and fears of rising interest rates are also adding to crude’s “nervous trade.”

READ: The World’s Most Important Oil Price Is About to Change for Good

Most market watchers are still betting on China’s recovery underpinning a price rally later this year, and comments from two of the nation’s oil majors painted an optimistic outlook. PetroChina and Cnooc Ltd. said a rebounding domestic economy can help cushion the impact of slower global growth.

Still, WTI remains on track for its fifth monthly decline in the wake of the banking crisis, concerns over potential recessions and resilient Russian output. 

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