West
Texas Intermediate crude rebounded from the lowest close in almost three weeks
as the U.S. said it will toughen sanctions on Russia, the biggest energy
exporter, over the Ukraine crisis. Brent was steady as Libya lifted force
majeure at one of its ports.
Futures
advanced as much as 0.9 percent in New York. The U.S. will impose new sanctions
today on people and companies close to Russian leader Vladimir Putin, President
Barack Obama said. Among those that may be targeted are Igor Sechin, chief
executive officer of OAO Rosneft, the country’s biggest oil producer, people
familiar with developments said. Libya’s National Oil Corp. will lift a
suspension of exports at the port of Zueitina, previously under rebel control,
from today.
“The
price is being supported by uncertainty as to the breadth and impact of
sanctions taken against Russia,” Christopher Bellew, a senior broker at
Jefferies Bache Ltd. in London, said by e-mail. “Another important
consideration is how Russia might retaliate against sanctions.”
WTI for
June delivery rose as much as 92 cents to $101.52 a barrel in electronic
trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and traded for $101.17 at 1:47
p.m. London time. Prices dropped 1.3 percent to $100.60 on April 25, the lowest
settlement since April 7. The volume of all futures traded was about 8.5
percent below the 100-day average for the time of day.
Brent
for June settlement pared gains of as much as 62 cents to $110.20 a barrel on
the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange, trading for $109.62 at 1:49 p.m.
London time. The contract closed at $109.58 on April 25, down 0.7 percent, the
biggest decline since April 7.
The U.S.
benchmark crude was at a discount of $8.46 to Brent on ICE. It ended the April
25 session at $8.98, the widest based on closing prices in six weeks.

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