Oil prices were stable on Friday, weighed by a stronger dollar, but supported by signs that physical fuel markets were tightening after two years of ballooning oversupply. The dollar rose to its highest level since March against a basket of other leading currencies .DXY on Friday, potentially crimping demand as fuel becomes more expensive for countries using other currencies. This came as China’s offshore yuan CNH=D3 fell to its lowest level in six years against the dollar. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude CLc1 was trading at $50.59 a barrel at 0652 GMT, down 4 cents from its last settlement. Brent crude futures LCOc1 were up 7 cents at $51.45 per barrel. Crude prices fell over 2 […]