SINGAPORE: Oil prices rebounded in Asian trade Thursday as heightened tensions in Ukraine overshadowed data showing US commercial crude inventories reaching an all-time high.
New York´s West Texas Intermediate for June delivery, was up 30 cents at $101.74 a barrel in afternoon trade, and Brent North Sea crude for June rose 24 cents to $109.35.Both contracts tumbled Wednesday on the US stockpiles data, which indicate softer demand at a time of robust production in the world´s biggest oil consuming nation.
Stocks rose 3.5 million barrels to 397.7 million for the week ended April 18, official figures showed, larger than the 2.4 million expected by analysts.
"While key economic data from US and Europe will be released this week, oil markets will continue to be influenced by geopolitical events," said Sanjeev Gupta, who heads the Asia-Pacific Oil & Gas practice at professional services firm EY.
In Eastern Europe an agreement between Ukraine, Russia and Western powers in Geneva last week to pull the country from the brink of civil war appeared shaky after a gunfight on Sunday killed at least two pro-Moscow rebels.
On Wednesday, Russia hinted it will strike back if its "legitimate interests" in the former Soviet state are attacked after Kiev sent in forces to dislodge militants who have occupied government buildings there.
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