US oil futures rose more than 2 percent in early Asian trade
on Thursday, adding to strong gains the previous session after the world's
biggest suppliers firmed up plans to meet to discuss freezing output.
Oil producers including Gulf OPEC members support holding
talks next month on a deal to keep production at current levels even if Iran
declines to participate, OPEC sources said on Wednesday, increasing the
likelihood of the first global supply deal in 15 years.
US crude was up 76 cents at USD 39.22 a barrel at 0136 GMT
and earlier traded as high as USD 39.38.
The contract settled up USD 2.12, or 5.8 percent, at USD
38.46 a barrel on Wednesday, erasing the losses of the previous two trading
days.
Brent crude rose 53 cents to USD 40.86.
On Wednesday, it finished up USD 1.59, or 4 percent, at USD
40.33 a barrel.
"A smaller than expected gain in inventories in the US
also supported prices," ANZ said in a morning note.
US crude oil stocks rose last week to record highs for a
fifth straight week, data from the Energy Information Administration showed on
Wednesday.
Crude inventories increased 1.3 million barrels in the week
to March 11 to 523.2 million, a much smaller build than the 3.4 million-barrel
increase expected by analysts.
Qatari oil minister Mohammed Bin Saleh Al-Sada said
producers from within and outside the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries will meet in Doha on April 17 to discuss plans for a freeze in
output.
Around 15 OPEC and non-OPEC producers, accounting for about
73 percent of global oil production, support the initiative, the minister said.
Since the freeze was first proposed last month, prices have
recovered about 50 percent from decade-low levels but been volatile without a
firm meeting date.
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