Seoul — Oil prices edged lower on Friday but were still near eight-week highs, buoyed by a decline in US inventories and oil cartel Opec’s ongoing efforts to curb production. Brent crude futures were down 6c or 0.1% at $51.43 a barrel at 2.51am GMT. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures had fallen 5c or 0.1% to $48.99 a barrel. Both benchmarks rose to their highest levels since May 31 in the previous session, buoyed by a rally in US petrol futures after earlier support from the latest efforts by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) to cut exports and a sharp fall in US crude inventories. "Crude oil prices rose further as the focus remained on fundamentals. This week’s better than expected inventory drawdown in the US continued to support prices," ANZ bank said in a note. US crude stocks fell sharply — by 7.2-million barrels — in the week to July 21, due to strong refining activity and an increase in exports, according to data from the Energy Informat...

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