* U.S. crude steadies after 6-year low as U.S. stockpiles
drop
* Worries that inventories could rise again keeps market in
check
(New throughout, updates prices and market activity, adds
analyst comments; changes byline, new dateline, previous LONDON)
By Barani Krishnan
NEW YORK, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Oil prices steadied on
Wednesday as a weaker dollar and lower U.S. crude stockpiles
provided a modest bounce off six-year lows hit the previous
session, when worries about China's plummeting currency and
economic slowdown sank prices.
Concerns that U.S. inventories could build again from higher
crude imports and refinery outages kept a lid on the rebound.
Prices rose less than 1 percent after Tuesday's 4 percent slump.
"The market needed a big drawdown to reverse the current
trends and didn't get it," said Chris Jarvis, analyst at Caprock
Risk Management in Frederick, Maryland.
Crude stockpiles in the United States fell by 1.7 million
barrels last week, just short of market expectations for a draw
of 1.8 million barrels, data from the Energy Information
Administration (EIA) showed.
Gasoline inventories also fell, by 1.3 million barrels
versus the 647,000 barrels forecast.
But U.S. crude imports rose by 393,000 barrels per day to
7.0 million bpd. Distillates, which included diesel and heating
oil, also jumped by 3.0 million barrels, more than the
1.3million-barrels expected. ID:L1N10N183
U.S. crude futures CLc1 were up 2 cents at $43.10 a barrel
by 12:17 p.m. EDT (1617 GMT), after gaining almost 80 cents at
the session high. On Tuesday, the market had fallen $1.88, or
more than 4 percent, to settle at $43.08 a barrel, its lowest
close since March 2009.
Futures of Brent LCOc1 , the global benchmark, were up 20
cents at $49.38 a barrel, after a session high at $49.91.
The dollar fell more than 1 percent against a basket of
other currencies .DXY , pulled down by doubts over whether the
U.S. Federal Reserve will raise interest rates after China's
currency devaluation drove the yuan to a four-year low.
China is the world's biggest oil consumer after the United
States and a weaker yuan erodes its purchasing power for
dollar-denominated imports. FRX/ MKTS/GLOB ID:nL3N10M6AI
ID:nL3N10L3B4
The International Energy Agency said low fuel prices were
stimulating global demand for oil but recovery was slow. IEA/M
"While a rebalancing has clearly begun, the process is
likely to be prolonged as a supply overhang is expected to
persist through 2016," the Paris-based energy watchdog said.
Outages at refineries operated by BP Plc BP.L in Whiting,
Indiana, and Phillips 66 (NYSE:PSX) PSX.N in Linden, New Jersey are
weighing on market sentiment. The Whiting plant's 240,000 bpd
crude processing unit will take at least a month to repair. The
powerformer at the 238,000 bpd Linden refinery, which produces
products used in blending gasoline, is expected to be shut a
couple of weeks. ID:nL1N10M1AQ