Oil prices reversed losses on Oct. 17 on expectations of an OPEC intervention next month to curb production, but a rising rig count in the U.S. capped gains.

International benchmark Brent crude oil futures rose 23 cents to $52.18 per barrel (bbl) at 6:51 a.m. CT (11:51 GMT), after falling to as low as $51.56/bbl earlier.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil futures were trading at $50.46/bbl, up 11 cents from their last settlement, after hitting a session low of $49.94/bbl.

Analysts said that the market is fundamentally supported by expectations that members of OPEC would take action to support prices at their meeting in Vienna on November 30.

"It's very hard for the Brent crude price to sell below the $50/bbl mark ahead of the November 30 meeting," said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst at SEB.

He said that OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia sent a very clear statement about working to curb production and support higher prices, but added that an oversupplied physical crude market was capping further gains in prices.

"Record supply from OPEC year-to-date, weaker global GDP estimates, and still elevated inventories cause us to lower and flatten our oil price outlook," Bernstein Energy said in a note.

OPEC pumped a record 33.6 MMbbl of crude oil per day in September, with some members signalling they plan further increases.

Nigeria expects its crude output to rise 22% to 2.2 MMbbl/d by the end of December, oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu said. And Libya's output has been steadily rising, hitting 551,000 bbl/d last week.

Traders said that WTI was under pressure from a report by oil services provider Baker Hughes Inc. (NYSE: BHI) showing U.S. drillers added four rigs in the week to Oct. 14. It was the 16th week in a row that oil drillers had gone without making cuts, indicating more production to come.

RELATED: US Drillers Extend Rig Recovery With Oil Over $50/bbl

A firmer dollar weighed on prices earlier in the day, as an expected hike in U.S. interest rates later this year drove the U.S. currency to a seven-month high against a basket of currencies.

Dollar-traded oil becomes more expensive for holders of other currencies when the greenback strengthens, potentially limiting demand.