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Oil prices drop by more than $2/bbl after OPEC+ increases production

Oil prices dropped by more than $2 a barrel in the early Asian trading on Monday, as OPEC+ was set to increase oil production even more. This sparked concerns over more supply.

Brent crude futures fell $2.04, or 3.33 percent, to $59.25 per barrel at 2240 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate was $56.19, down $2.10 or 3.60%.

The two contracts reached their lowest levels since April 9 on Monday, after OPEC+ agreed that they would increase oil production for a second month in a row. They will raise output by 411,000 barrels / day (bpd) in June.

Calculations show that the June increase will bring the combined April, May, and June increases to 960,000 bpd. This represents a 44% reduction of the 2.2 millions bpd in various cuts agreed upon since 2022.

Tim Evans, the founder of Evans on Energy, said in a report that "the May 3 OPEC+'s decision to increase production quotas by another 411,000 bpd to June increases the market expectations that the global demand/supply balance is moving towards a surplus."

The group can be divided into two or more groups.

Fully unwind

OPEC+ sources said that if member countries do not improve their compliance with production quotas by the end October, they will be forced to make voluntary cuts.

OPEC+ sources claim that Saudi Arabia has pushed OPEC+ members to speed up the unwinding process of previous output cuts in order to punish Iraq and Kazakhstan, who have failed to meet their production quotas.

Amarpreet Singh, an analyst at Barclays, said that the accelerated phase-out by OPEC+ had caused them to lower their Brent forecasts by $4 to $66 a barrel in 2025 and $2 to $60 a barrel in 2026.

Tensions have risen in the Middle East since Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to take retaliation against Iran over the Tehran-backed Houthi Group

Fire a missile

This plane landed in Israel's main airport.

Aziz Nasirzadeh, Iran's defence minister, said on Sunday that Tehran will continue to defend itself.

Strike back

If the United States or Israel attack. (Reporting and editing by Diane Craft, Chris Reese and Florence Tan)

(source: Reuters)