
That increase
came despite seasonal refinery utilisation hitting an 11-year high, while a
rise in the dollar index put further pressure on oil prices.
Brent crude
futures fell 45 cents to $38.81 a barrel as of 0518 GMT. It ended up 12 cents
in the previous session after touching a session peak of $40.61.
The
front-month contract for U.S. crude futures dropped 53 cents to $37.79 a
barrel, after dropping to $37.74 earlier, the lowest since March 16. It settle
up 4 cents in the previous session following a gain of 3 percent earlier in the
session.
Prices will
"zig-zag" for the rest of the year, said Tony Nunan, oil risk manager
at Japan's Mitsubishi Corp.
U.S. crude
stockpiles rose by 2.3 million barrels to 534.8 million barrels in the week to
March 25, the seventh week at record high levels, data from the U.S. Energy
Information Administration shows.
But the
increase was less than analysts' expectations of a 3.3 million barrel build
after crude imports fell 636,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 7.4 million bpd.
Refinery crude
runs rose by 414,000 bpd and refinery utilisation rates rose 2 percentage
points to 90.4 percent of total capacity, the highest seasonal rate since 2005.
Crude prices,
which have risen about 50 percent since mid-February, have started to track lower
in the past week.
"Oil
prices will trend down again ... $35 a barrel will be the support level. Low
prices are not sustainable in the long-run," Nunan said.
But with OPEC
flagging a price of $50 a barrel and oil producers scheduled to meet in Doha on
April 17 to discuss a possible output freeze, prices are likely to remain
range-bound.
"Anytime
prices get close to $45-$50 a barrel, funds that have taken long positions are
likely to take profits. Unless things really ignite the global economy, then
people will sell-off at that level," Nunan said.
In Asia,
sustained weakness in oil prices is continuing to suppress upstream oil and gas
production activity, consultancy BMI Research said in a report on Thursday.
Weaker oil
prices are "limiting opportunities to stem natural declines in ageing
assets and bringing new production sources online," the report added.
Concerns over global oversupply were further fuelled
after crude output from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) rose in March to 32.47 million bpd from 32.37 million bpd in February,
according to a Reuters survey based on shipping and other data.
Iran is
expected to add half a million barrels of oil supply a day within a year from
existing oilfields after sanctions were lifted in January, Fatih Birol, the
head of the International Energy Agency told Reuters on Wednesday.
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