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Conference Board of Canada cautious about crude price rebound

Oil hit six-year lows in January, yet Alberta's job market proved surprisingly buoyant. Larry MacDougal / The Canadian Press

CALGARY – The Conference Board of Canada says it’s taking a cautious view of crude prices, even though they’ve improved substantially since the beginning of the year.

The key U.S. benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, has been hovering around the US$60 mark for the past few months after dipping as low as US$44 in January.

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The Ottawa-based economic think-tank expects WTI to gradually recover over the next few months, but remain below US$65 a barrel even by the end of 2015.

That’s welcome in Canada’s oil industry, where many drillers can’t make ends meet with oil below US$50 and still struggle in the US$60 range.

The board says although a drop back to US$50 a barrel is unlikely, the days of US$100 crude are becoming an increasingly distant memory.

There are risks that could cause a pullback, like high U.S. inventory levels, greater Saudi production and a surge in U.S. shale production.

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READ MORE: Alberta can’t avoid a recession, says Conference Board of Canada

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