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Oil flat as Fed offsets heating oil supply drop

The price of oil was flat yesterday as a big drop in heating oil supplies was offset by a decision by the Federal Reserve to further reduce its stimulus program.

Benchmark US crude for March delivery slipped 5 US cents to close at US$97.36 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Supplies of distillate fuels, including heating oil, declined sharply last week as the US Northeast shivered through a cold spell. The Energy Department said distillate supplies dropped by 4.6 million barrels, twice what analysts expected. With cold weather expected to dominate forecasts for the next few weeks, refiners will be demanding more crude to produce heating oil.

The supply report helped push oil slightly higher in the afternoon. But that gain disappeared when the Fed, as expected, said it will cut its monthly bond purchases by an additional US$10 billion to US$65 billion because of a strengthening US economy.

Oil prices have been underpinned by the Fed's stimulus because it has kept the dollar from strengthening, making oil more affordable for traders using other currencies. The low interest rates created by the bond buying have also attracted investors to commodities like crude oil in search of higher profits.

The rough winter weather in much of the US, including ice storms in the South, gave another boost to natural gas. Futures rose 52 US cents, or 10 percent, to US$5.56 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Brent crude, used to set prices for international varieties of crude, rose 44 US cents at US$107.85 on the ICE Futures exchange in London.




 

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