Oil rises after Aramco raises crude selling price
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[TOKYO] Oil prices rose on Monday after Saudi Arabia's state-owned oil producer Aramco raised the official selling price for its crude, suggesting demand remains strong at a time of tighter supplies.
Brent crude was up by 90 cents or 1.1 per cent at US$83.64 a barrel, after dropping nearly 2 per cent last week. US oil gained 87 cents or 1.1 per cent to US$82.14, having declined almost 3 per cent through Friday.
Aramco late on Friday raised its December official selling price to Asia for its Arab light crude to US$2.70 a barrel versus Oman/Dubai crude, up US$1.40 from this month.
The move by Aramco suggests "demand remains strong" as the Opec producer and other major oil exporters keep the reins on supply, ANZ Research said in a note.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies such as Russia, together known as Opec+, agreed last week to stick to their plan to raise oil output by 400,000 barrels per day from December.
US President Joe Biden had called on Opec+ to produce more barrels to dampen rising prices and on Saturday said his administration has "other tools" to deal with the higher price of oil.
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Elsewhere, China's oil imports slumped in October to the lowest in three years, as state-owned refiners withheld purchases due to higher prices, while independent refiners were restrained by limited quotas for bringing in crude.
REUTERS
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