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Oil Prices Set For A Weekly Gain As Chinese Demand Rebounds

Crude oil prices could this week reverse a streak of weekly losses, buoyed by expectations of a demand rebound in China.

Although trade began today with a loss for both WTI and Brent, oil prices are set to end the week higher after Chinese statistical authorities reported that manufacturing activity had grown at the fastest pace in more than 10 years in February.

On the bearish side sits a ten-week streak of crude oil inventory additions in the United States that have pushed the total from below the five-year average to some 9% above it, easing concerns about supply.

There was also the latest inflation data from the eurozone, which showed a larger-than-expected increase to 8.5% in February. High inflation leads to an economic slowdown and, consequently, lower demand for oil and oil products.

Meanwhile, a signal from the Fed that it may stop raising interest rates, at least for a while, later this year, added upward pressure to prices.

In supply news, OPEC's total output rose last month as Nigeria ramped up production to the highest in a year, at 1.44 million. This contributed to a total 120,000 bpd increase in total OPEC output in February. The increase more than offset a decline of 49,000 bpd booked for January.

China, then, remains the single biggest bullish factor for oil prices, with expectations that the country will see strong economic growth this year. The country's GDP is forecast to expand by more than 5% year-on-year, which would undoubtedly boost demand for oil significantly.

Yet concern about inflation in other parts of the world, notably the EU and the United States, remains substantial and acts as a cap on prices.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

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Irina Slav

Irina is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing on the oil and gas industry. More