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Oil rose from near a six-week low as positive Chinese economic data helped ease concern over demand in the world’s biggest importer, before an OPEC+ monitoring meeting this week, Bloomberg reports.
Brent crude advanced toward $82 a barrel after falling 1.5% on Friday to notch a third weekly drop, with West Texas Intermediate above $77. Industrial profits in Asia’s largest economy grew at a faster year-on-year pace in June than May, showing the resilience of manufacturing.
Crude remains modestly higher this year, helped by OPEC+ supply discipline and expectations the Federal Reserve is getting closer to lower borrowing costs. An interest-rate decision from the US central bank is due Wednesday. Key members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies meet online a day later, with the market split on whether the group will alter production levels.
Traders will also be monitoring developments in the Middle East.
“Concerns around China’s economy have broadly weighed on energy commodity prices,” said Vivek Dhar, an analyst at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Melbourne. “Demand concerns, though, will likely give way to rising geopolitical risks in the Middle East early this week” as the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah worsens.
Elsewhere, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said the US has “serious concerns” about the results of the election in Venezuela, after Nicolás Maduro was reelected as the OPEC member’s president for six more years.