Oil Rises but Weak China Data Caps Prices – Energy News for the Canadian Oil & Gas Industry | EnergyNow.ca

  • Expiring December Brent futures rise by $1 a barrel
  • Chinese PMI data misses forecast and falls below 50
  • Investors continue to assess risk of Middle East escalation
  • Euro zone inflation hit two-year low in October

London, Oct 31 (Reuters) – Oil prices edged up on Tuesday helped by a drop in euro zone inflation but were pinned below $90 a barrel on weak Chinese economic data and as the conflict in the Middle East remained contained.

December Brent crude futures , were 85 cents, or 0.97%, higher at $88.30 a barrel by 1136 GMT ahead of their expiry later on Tuesday.

The more heavily traded January contract climbed 59 cents, or 0.68%,to $86.94. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude rose 61 cents, or 0.74%, to $82.92.

Both Brent contracts traded $1 higher earlier in the day.

Euro zone inflation was at its lowest level in two years in October, falling to 2.9% from 4.3% in September according to Eurostat’s flash estimate.

Meanwhile, weaker-than-expected manufacturing and non-manufacturing activity data in China stoked fears of slowing fuel demand from the world’s No. 2 oil consumer.

Its official purchasing managers’ index missed a forecast and dipped back below the 50-point level separating contraction from expansion.

China’s fourth quarter fuel demand is expected to rise 10% year-on-year, PetroChina president Huang Yongzhang said on Tuesday.

Oil prices had fallen on Monday in part “because Israel’s ground offensive in the Gaza Strip is so far proceeding only gradually and has thus not yet sparked any further escalation of the Middle East conflict,” Commerzbank analysts said.

But investors continue to be wary of other countries in the region entering the conflict.

“Given the recalcitrant attitude of the warring parties and the potentially protracted and explosive nature of the ongoing conflict the Middle East premium will likely put a floor under the prices in the foreseeable future,” PVM’s Tamas Varga added.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed calls for a halt to fighting to ease a humanitarian crisis on Tuesday, as Israeli forces attacked Hamas in the network of tunnels under the Palestinian exclave.

Markets were also keeping a close eye on a U.S. central bank meeting ending on Wednesday, despite a high likelihood it will keep interest rates steady, according to a poll by CME’s Fedwatch tool.

Reporting by Robert Harvey, Laura Sanicola and Trixie Yap; Editing by Kirsten Donovan

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