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Oil steady as U.S. producers, refiners avoid worst of storm - CNBC

Storage tanks stand the Sabine Pass LNG Export Terminal ahead of Hurricane Laura in Sabine Pass, Texas, U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2020.
Luke Sharrett | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Oil prices were steady on Friday as a massive storm raced inland past the heart of the U.S. oil industry in Louisiana and Texas without causing any widespread damage to refineries.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were up 9 cents, or 0.21%, at $43.13 per barrel.

WTI is on track to rise 1.6% rise this week, for a fourth straight week of gains.

Brent crude futures for October, set to expire on Friday, rose 4 cents to $45.13 a barrel, heading for a 1.7% weekly gain. The more active November contract climbed 3 cents to $45.63.

Hurricane Laura hit Louisiana early Thursday with 150 mile-per-hour (240 kph) winds, damaging buildings, knocking down trees and cutting power to more than 650,000 people in Louisiana and Texas, but refineries were spared from feared massive flooding.

"With the U.S. Gulf hurricanes out of the way and preliminary assessment showing no damage to the upstream or downstream facilities, crude has surrendered most of the storm premium and could enter a holding pattern again," said Vandana Hari, oil market analyst at Vanda Insights.

Hurricane Laura hit Louisiana early Thursday with winds of 150 miles per hour (240 km per hour), damaging buildings, knocking down trees and cutting power to more than 650,000 people in Louisiana and Texas, but refineries were spared from feared massive flooding.

But investors are shifting their concerns from production outages to demand destruction, analysts said.

"Crude prices have barely budged this week, but refining margins have been hammered as flash floods disrupt normal consumption patterns, likely for a longer period of time than (Gulf of Mexico) production remains offline," said RBC Capital in a note.

U.S. producers had shut 1.56 million barrels per day of crude output, or 83% of the Gulf of Mexico's production, while nine refineries had shut around 2.9 million bpd of capacity, or 15% of U.S. processing capacity, ahead of the storm.

Late on Thursday, the Port of Houston, the top U.S. crude oil export hub accounting for about 600,000 bpd of shipments, was in the process of reopening to commercial shipping late Thursday.

The earlier closures of Houston Port, Beaumont and Port Arthur were expected to reduce seaborne crude export capacity by nearly 1 million bpd, data intelligence firm Kpler estimated, based on average figures over the past four months.

In refining, Motiva Enterprises is preparing to restart its 607,000 bpd refinery in Port Arthur, Texas, the largest in the U.S., on Friday and Exxon Mobil Corp was preparing to restart units at 369,024 bpd with its Beaumont, Texas refinery.

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Oil steady as U.S. producers, refiners avoid worst of storm - CNBC
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