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Oil prices drop on fears of a trade war, despite Russian supply threats

Oil prices drop on fears of a trade war, despite Russian supply threats

The oil prices fell slightly on Tuesday, as concerns over the impact of a global trade war on growth trumped fears about the supply being affected by threats from U.S. president Donald Trump to impose second-tier tariffs on Russian crude or bomb Iran.

Brent futures fell 10 cents or 0.1% to $74.67 per barrel at 0013 GMT. U.S. West Texas intermediate crude futures dropped 11 cents or 0.1% to settle at $71.37 after reaching five-week highs the day before.

In March, a poll of 49 economists & analysts predicted that oil prices will remain under pressure due to U.S. Tariffs and slowdowns in India & China while OPEC+ increases production.

A slower global growth could reduce fuel demand and offset any decrease in supply caused by Trump's threats of bombing Iran and imposing secondary tariffs on Russian oil buyers.

After Trump's threats initially increased prices on Monday traders said they saw the president's warnings towards Russia at least as a bluff.

Trump told NBC News on Sunday that he is very angry with Russian president Vladimir Putin, and will impose secondary tariffs between 25% and 50% on Russian oil purchasers Moscow tries to stop efforts to end war in Ukraine.

The tariffs would hurt the biggest oil customers of Moscow, China and India, and disrupt global oil supply.

Trump threatened Iran, too, with bombings and tariffs similar to those he had imposed on the United States if it did not agree with Washington over its nuclear program.

Tuesday, the American Petroleum Institute will release its weekly inventory figures. These data will be closely watched by the market as they are released before official statistics from Energy Information Administration.

Five analysts interviewed by estimated that U.S. crude stocks fell by an average of 2.1 million barrels during the week ending March 28.

(source: Reuters)