Oil prices firmed on Friday as bullish news from strong Chinese oil imports to turmoil in the Middle East put Brent on track for a nearly three per cent weekly gain.
The developments added to other signs that the market was finally rebalancing after years of excess, but analysts warned that the 2018 balance was still in view.
Brent was at 57.20 dollars, up 95 cents. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was at 51.44 per barrel dollars, up 84 cents from its last settlement.
The contracts were on track for weekly gains of more than two per cent and four per cent, respectively.
Chinese oil imports hit nine million barrels per day (bpd) in September, data showed on Friday.
Imports averaged 8.5 million bpd between January and September, solidifying China’s position as the world’s biggest oil importer.
“We woke up with the strong data from China. That’s on the supportive side,” said Olivier Jakob, managing director of oil consultancy PetroMatrix.
China’s huge imports have been strongly driven by purchases for its strategic petroleum reserves (SPR).
The nation has spent around 24 billion dollars on building its crude reserves since 2015 and now holds around 850 million barrels of oil in inventory, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).
Unrest in Iraq, and possible U.S. action on the Iran nuclear deal, also underpinned prices.
On Friday, local television reported that tens of thousands of Kurdish fighters had deployed in the Kirkuk oil region to confront possible “threats” from Iraqi forces.
Tensions between the two, which traders fear could impinge on oil exports from the region, have been building since Iraq’s Kurds overwhelmingly backed independence in a Sept. 25 vote.
Later on Friday, U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to announce that he will not certify the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.
The deal has to be re-certified every 90 days and is due for renewal on Sunday.
The step would give the U.S. Congress 60 days to decide whether to impose sanctions, but Iran’s parliament speaker told the TASS news agency that decertification would “be the end” of the deal and cause “global chaos”.
“U.S. sanctions could cut off a lot of Iranian oil trade finance,” Jeff Brown, president of energy consultancy FGE, told Reuters this week.
Despite the bullish signals, analysts warned that the OPEC needed to extend its agreement to reduce oil output beyond its current March 2018 expiry date in order to clear stocks.
OPEC, with other producers including Russia, has agreed to production cuts of 1.8 million bpd.
“OPEC-led cuts have breathed new life into oil bulls, but unless the organisation digs deeper, the drawdown in global oil stockpiles might end,” broker PVM’s Stephen Brennock wrote.