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After Trump's Russia-Utterance, oil prices remain steady

The oil prices rose in early trading Wednesday, after rising by more than 3% the previous session. This was due to the potential shortages that could arise after U.S. president Donald Trump gave Moscow a short deadline for ending the conflict in Ukraine.

Brent crude futures rose by 14 cents or 0.19% to $72.65 a barge at 0048 GMT, while U.S. West Texas intermediate crude climbed by 2 cents or 0.03% to $69.23 a barge.

On Tuesday, both contracts settled at their highest level since June 20.

Trump announced on Tuesday that he would begin imposing measures against Russia, including 100% secondary duties on its trading partners if the country did not end the war in 10-12 days. This was a move up from an earlier deadline of 50 days.

"Secondary 100% tariffs in effect would cause a dramatic change on the oil market." ING analysts stated that a number of major buyers of Russian crude oil, especially large U.S. traders, would be reluctant to keep buying it.

While this allows OPEC+ to begin unwinding further tranches of the supply cuts, a worst case scenario would still see a market deficit.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that the U.S. warned China, which is the biggest buyer of Russian crude oil, it would face large tariffs if they continued to buy. The U.S. and the EU were holding trade negotiations in Stockholm.

Analysts from JP Morgan said that India had signaled its willingness to comply with U.S. Sanctions, putting at risk 2.3 million barrels of Russian oil per day.

The U.S.-EU avoided a trade conflict with a deal which included 15% U.S. Tariffs on European Imports. This eased concerns over the impact of trade tensions and economic growth, and offered further support for oil prices.

After talks last week on the topic, foreign partners of Venezuela's state oil company PDVSA still await authorizations from the U.S. This could bring some supply back to the market and ease pressure to increase prices. (Reporting and editing by Muralikumar Aantharaman; Colleen Howe)

(source: Reuters)