U.S. oil prices climb back to highest settlement since 2018

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Oil futures climbed Friday, with U.S. prices up a second week in a row and marking another settlement at the highest since October 2018. Among the reasons behind the recent advances for oil has been a weaker U.S. dollar, as well as "expectations that demand will pick up further as the vaccination programs in the U.S. and U.K. ramp up further, and restrictions get eased further," said Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK. "Downside risk to prospects of increased demand remains a rise in infection rates and slow vaccination rates in Asia, which could prompt slower economic re-openings," he said. West Texas Intermediate oil for July delivery CLN21, +0.83% rose 81 cents, or 1.2%, to settle at $69.62 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. For the week, front-month contract prices gained 5%, according to FactSet data.

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Tilray rated overweight at Cantor after Aphria merger closes

Cantor Fitzgerald assigned Tilray Inc. undefinedundefined an overweight rating this week and said the new company -- it recently closed its merger with Aphria Inc. -- is alone among Canadian licensed producers with domestic scale and a credible overseas platform. Analyst Pablo Zuanic assigned the stock a $22 price target that is down from $30.25 before the merger, but about 11.5% above its current trading level. "Except in recent months (deal-related distraction?), Aphria was one of the best performers in Canada recreational (cannabis) achieving a #1 position (speaking in organic terms, and did so while achieving positive cannabis EBITDA), and Tilray ran ahead of peers in the export cannabis markets," Zuanic wrote in a note to clients. "We do not see another LP that can make these combined claims." Questions do remain however, about how the combined entity will meet some of its guidance, including a 30% share of the Canadian recreational market and a C$100 million ($82.4 million) cost synergy target, he wrote. Cantor is expecting the Canadian sector to enjoy favorable headwinds in the months ahead as consumer demand recovers from COVID and assuming some U.S. deregulation. Tilray shares were up 0.7% premarket and have gained 139% in the year to date, while the Cannabis ETF undefined has gained 42% and the S&P 500 undefined has gained 11.6%.

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