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Oil cracks $68 for the first time in 3 years

West Texas Intermediate was up more than 2% on Wednesday.

  • Oil hit a three-year high above $68 a barrel Wednesday.
  • The rise came after news of falling US inventories.
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Oil cracked $68 a barrel for the first time in three years Wednesday after reports of a big drop in US crude inventories.

West Texas Intermediate surged more than 2%, trading at $68.14 per barrel around 11:31 a.m — a level not seen since late 2014. Brent, the international benchmark, also soared, trading up about 1.50% to $72.49.

The rally comes on the back of oil supply concerns. The US Energy Information Administration released a report showing oil inventories in the US fell by 1.1 million barrels last week to about 428 million barrels.

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Recent signals that OPEC could extend supply cuts into next year are also pushing prices up.

Saudi Arabia told sources they are targeting a crude price of $80 or even $100, Reuters reported Wednesday. That could be a hint that OPEC will keep capping oil production after the current deal expires in December.

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