By Koustav Samanta
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil prices remained little changed in choppy trade on Friday as traders flip-flopped between the negative fundamentals of persistent oversupply and support cushions from a sixth weekly decline in U.S. oil rig counts.
Brent crude
U.S. crude
Despite today's losses, crude prices were still on track to notch their highest weekly percentage gain in six weeks, but some traders said the sharp rise earlier in the week was overblown.
U.S. energy firms cut oil rigs for a sixth week in a row this week, the longest streak of weekly declines since June, data released on Friday showed, a sign low prices continued to keep drillers away from the well pad.
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Drillers removed nine oil rigs in the week ended Oct. 9, bringing the total rig count down to 605, oil services company Baker Hughes Inc
Jim Ritterbusch, president of Galena, Illinois-based Ritterbusch & Associates, said earlier in the day that he would be looking for a decrease of more than 10-15 rigs in Friday's report in order to keep the short term bull move alive in the oil markets.
Some traders said concerns about falling shale output in Canada, as well as the Bakken region, added support to U.S. crude.
"I think the market is repricing (U.S. crude) higher versus other grades of crude in the Atlantic Basin because of this fear," said Scott Shelton, oil broker and commodities specialist at ICAP in Durham, North Carolina.
"Whether its 'fear' or 'reality' remains to be seen."
The momentum had been more bullish earlier in the session after the U.S. central bank's meeting minutes on Thursday showed more policymakers than expected had agreed to keep the first interest rate hike in a decade on hold.
In the Middle East, an Iranian Revolutionary Guards general was killed near Aleppo, where he was advising the Syrian army.
Saudi Arabia kept its crude oil production steady in September, an industry source told Reuters, maintaining a high level of output as part of a strategy to defend market share.
(Additional by Barani Krishnan in New York; Editing by Alan Crosby)