Oil Prices Stabilizes on Solid Chinese Demand

Oil prices were steady as China's strong appetite for fuel eased worries of an ongoing supply overhang.

Brent crude futures traded at $47.75 per barrel, rising by 1 cent from their last settlement. Meanwhile, U.S. WTI crude futures traded at $45.48 per barrel, falling 1 cent from the previous session's close.

China imported 212 million tonnes of crude oil, equivalent to 8.55 million bpd from January to June of the year. This is up 13.8 percent during the same period last year, according to customs data, making china the biggest importer of crude products ahead of the U.S.

The solid demand from China allayed worries regarding an ongoing fuel supply glut.

On Wednesday, OPEC said that the world would require 32.20 million bpd of crude from its producer members next year, down 60, 000 bpd from the current year, as consumers have increasing options of supply from outside the cartel. But the group also said its output climbed by 393, 000 bpd in June to 32.611 million bpd, with gains led by Nigeria and Libya.

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