Companies United States of America FollowLONDON, June 15 (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on Thursday after a plunge the previous day, as data showed a jump in refinery runs in top crude importer China though a weak economic backdrop capped gains.
The market saw support after data on Thursday showed China's oil refinery throughput in May rising 15.4% from a year earlier, hitting its second highest total on record.
Also capping price gains were fears that higher interest rates would slow economies in the United States and Europe, and lower oil demand.
Analysts, however, expect oil prices to see support later in the year as voluntary cuts by OPEC+ countries implemented in May, and from Saudi Arabia in July, coincide with robust demand.
"Once these deficits become visible in on-land oil inventories, we expect oil prices to trend higher," the bank said in a note on Thursday.
Persons:
Rowena Edwards, Jeslyn Lerh, Emelia Sithole, Jason Neely
Organizations:
Brent, . West Texas, Kuwait Petroleum, U.S . Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of England, UBS, Thomson
Locations:
States, America, China, Kuwait, United States, Europe, Saudi Arabia, London, Singapore, Houston