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Oil prices in modest rebound

London - Oil prices rose on Tuesday, rebounding slightly from sharp losses sparked by a report that Saudi Arabia was close to completing an oilfield expansion.

Analysts said the gains, partly prompted by a slightly weaker dollar, would likely be short-lived due to lingering worries about a global supply glut.

At around 11:00 GMT, New York's benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for delivery in June was up 41 cents at $43.05 a barrel.

Brent North Sea crude for June delivery gained 66 cents to $45.14 a barrel compared with Monday's close.

Both contracts dived Monday after Bloomberg News said Saudi state oil company Aramco would complete the expansion of its Shaybah oilfield by the end of May, allowing the world's largest exporter to maintain total capacity at 12 million barrels a day.

Those losses broke a week of gains on the back of upbeat data from China, the world's biggest energy user, and speculation that talks to limit production could be restarted.

But Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney, told AFP: "Although we are seeing some positive moves in our trading session today, they have come on very light volumes."

He noted that attention would focus on Wednesday's data on US commercial crude supplies, which are currently near historic highs.

The US government's Department of Energy will publish commercial American crude stockpiles for the week ending April 22.

Also on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve will end its latest policy meeting. While it is not expected to unveil any new measures, dealers will hope for some forward guidance on monetary policy and any future interest rate rises.

The world oil market has been hammered over the past two years by weak demand, overproduction, a slowing global economy - particularly China - and a supply glut.

Talks this month aimed at addressing the output problem collapsed in Doha as major producer Saudi Arabia refused to take part without key rival Iran.

Iran is unwilling to make output cuts as it returns to the market after years of Western-imposed nuclear-linked sanctions.

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