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Oil prices fall amid market declines and strong dollar pressure

The oil prices fell on Wednesday as investors assessed the outlook for supply, amid a wider financial market slump and a stronger U.S. Dollar.

Brent crude futures fell by 6 cents or 0.1% to $64.38 per barrel at 0408 GMT. They had previously hit a two-week low. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was down 10 cents or 0.17% at $60.46.

In a client note published on Wednesday, ANZ analysts noted that investors had left the energy market due to a risk-off mood across all markets.

After an overnight sell-off led by tech on Wall Street, the market volatility in Asia reached levels last seen in April.

The U.S. Dollar Index - which measures currency against euro, sterling, the yen, and three other counterparts - was stable at a 3-month high. This was boosted by divisions within the Federal Reserve Board, and indicates low odds of an interest rate reduction at the next policy meetings in December.

The demand for oil can be affected by a stronger dollar. Demand is typically boosted by a U.S. rate cut.

Tony Sycamore, IG's market analyst, said that crude oil was trading lower as the risk sentiment shifted to a negative direction, boosting the U.S. Dollar, a safe haven currency. Both factors weighed on crude oil prices.

The API data on Tuesday showed that U.S. crude stocks rose during the week ending October 31. This put pressure on prices.

Prices were still being affected by supply-side concerns. OPEC+ (Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries) and its allies, also known as OPEC, agreed to increase production by 137,000 barrels a day in December.

The group decided that it would halt further increases during the first quarter 2026. The pause, however, was "unlikely" to provide meaningful support for November and December prices. LSEG analysts stated in a report.

OPEC only increased its production by 30,000 bpd compared to 330,000 bpd the month before as OPEC+ agreed increases were offset due to declines in Nigeria. Libya, and Venezuela. Reporting by Colleen Liu and Siyi Liu from Singapore and Beijing; Editing by Christian Schmollinger, Christopher Cushing

(source: Reuters)