Brent crude oil futures rose 88 cents, or 1.79 percent, to $50.74 per barrel, near an intraday high going back to June 23, Reuters reports.
West Texas Intermediate,WTI, crude futures jumped $1.43, or 3.06 percent, at $48.22 a barrel, also near a session peak going back to July 5.
Both benchmarks have risen more than 20 percent from a low in early August on news the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other key exporters will probably revive talks on freezing output levels when they meet in Algeria next month.
The rally has also been buoyed by short covering, as speculators including hedge funds and other money managers have amassed record short positions.
Many OPEC members have been hurt badly by a collapse in oil prices over the last two years. While some Gulf oil exporters have very low output costs, other producers such as Iran and Venezuela need oil prices above $100 to balance their budgets.
“With the lack of investment from outside oil companies, the sovereigns will be the best hope to raise production next year in a situation where it is likely that demand will exceed global output and that in and of itself is a reason that a production freeze at current levels still matters,” said Phil Flynn, senior energy analyst at Price Futures Group.
OPEC members will meet on the sidelines of the International Energy Forum, which groups producers and consumers, in Algeria on September 26-28.
However, freezing production at current levels might not help bolster prices, many analysts say, particularly since Saudi Arabia signaled that it could boost crude oil supplies in August to a new record, even as it prepares to discuss output levels with other producers.
“The latest news from Saudi Arabia is not price supportive at all,” Carsten Fritsch, senior oil and commodities analyst at Germany’s Commerzbank, said, “This is a double whammy for the oil market. A test of the lows of early August is quite possible.”
Analysts at Citi also warned of the risks of a price rally based largely on potential future talks on freezing crude output levels given that similar meetings earlier this year failed to produce any such agreement.