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Oil prices mixed after weak Chinese trade data

Oil traders continue to eye Chinese data with caution
Oil traders continue to eye Chinese data with caution

Oil prices were mixed today after the latest Chinese trade data showed lacklustre demand in the world's top energy consumer. 

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in October fell 69 cents to $45.36 a barrel, with the contract affected also by low-volume trading yesterday due to a public holiday in the US. 

Brent North Sea crude for October jumped $1.14 to $48.82 a barrel in London deals. 

The Chinese customs administration said overseas shipments in August fell 5.5% from a year earlier - which was less of a drop than analysts had expected. This compared with a fall of 8.3% in July. 

Chinese imports dropped 13.8%, from an 8.1% decrease in July. 

The data was the first in a string of economic figures this week that will be used as a barometer of the state of the Chinese economy, the world's second-biggest and a crucial driver of global growth. 

Oil prices have come under pressure from concerns that China's slowing economy will curb demand for the commodities that have helped feed its astonishing growth over the past three decades.

The devaluation of the yuan on August 11 fuelled economic fears, sparking a slump in world equities sending commodities, as measured by the Bloomberg Commodity Index of 22 raw materials, to a 16-year-low before stabilising near current levels. 

Oil prices are down almost 30% from this year's closing peak in May. 

Analysts said dealers would next scrutinise the weekly US stockpiles report due on Thursday. 

US commercial crude reserves currently sit near an eight-decade peak owing to high production levels despite tepid demand.

Dealers had been hoping that an uptick in US demand, coupled with a slowdown in output, could whittle down the huge global supplies that were a key reason for the collapse in prices since the middle of 2014.