U.S. crude oil stocks fell for a ninth straight week, led by a record drawdown at the U.S. storage hub in Cushing, Okla., the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said on Jan. 18.

Crude inventories fell 6.9 million barrels (bbl) in the week to Jan. 12, compared with analysts' expectations for a decrease of 3.5 million bbl.

Overall crude inventories have been steadily dwindling as demand remains strong and refineries run at a steady clip. Excluding the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve, inventories are now sitting at 412.7 million bbl, the lowest level since February of 2015.

Crude stocks at the Cushing delivery hub for U.S. crude futures fell 4.2 million bbl, the largest weekly draw for Cushing dating back to 2004 when records began, the EIA said.

Last week, traders said market intelligence firm Genscape reported notable outflows from Cushing on the start-up of a new pipeline from that location to Memphis, Tenn.

Oil prices rebounded from earlier losses, but gains were minimal. U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures were up 10 cents to $64.03/bbl as of 10:22 a.m. CST (16:22 GMT), while Brent was down 5 cents to $69.33/bbl, paring losses from earlier in the session.

"The report was really only supportive in terms of the further drop in crude oil inventories, which continue to plunge. Refiners dialed back operations, and domestic production leapt higher by a lot to 9.75 million bbl/d. The 10 million-bbl/d mark is easily within reach," said John Kilduff, partner at energy hedge fund Again Capital LLC in New York.

After falling the previous week due to cold weather, U.S. crude production rose 258,000 bbl/d to 9.75 million bbl/d last week.

Refinery crude runs fell by 448,000 bbl/d, the EIA data showed. Refinery utilization rates fell 2.3 percentage points to 93% of total capacity, which is still seasonally high. East Coast refining activity dropped in the most recent week to 81.1% of overall capacity, lowest since April.

Gasoline stocks rose 3.6 million bbl, compared with expectations in a Reuters poll for a 3.4 million-bbl gain.

Distillate stockpiles, which include diesel and heating oil, fell 3.9 million bbl, vs. expectations for a 86,000-bbl increase, the EIA data showed.

Net U.S. crude imports rose last week by 58,000 bbl/d.