Latest News

Prices of oil fall due to rising US inventories

The price of oil fell on Wednesday, as a report from the industry showed that crude and fuel stocks in the U.S. - the world's largest crude consumer - rose in the previous week. This reinforced the growing concern about the oversupply in the market.

Brent crude futures fell 28 cents or 0.43% to $64.61 per barrel at 0200 GMT after rising 1.1% the previous session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude Futures fell 24 cents or 0.4% to $60.5 per barrel after rising by 1.4% on Tuesday.

Market sources reported late Tuesday that U.S. crude oil and fuel stockpiles rose during the past week. They cited American Petroleum Institute data.

API, citing sources, reported that crude stocks increased by 4.45 millions barrels during the week ending November 14. Gasoline inventories rose by 1.55million barrels while distillate inventories grew by 577,000.

In a report published on Wednesday by the Chinese brokerage Haitong Futures, API data showing increases in crude and fuel stocks "pointed out a weakening of demand and lowered outlook for oil price."

The official U.S. Government inventory data will be released on Wednesday. Eight analysts polled ahead of the data release estimated that crude inventories would likely have fallen by approximately 600,000 barrels during the week ending November 14.

The price of oil rose on Tuesday, as investors weighed the impact of U.S. sanction on Russian oil exports. Also, Ukrainian attacks on Russian export terminals and refineries have raised concerns about fuel and crude shortages.

Analysts have forecast that the oil production is above current demand. This has pushed prices up.

Profit margins in Europe for diesel fuel production have soared following Ukrainian attacks on Russian energy infrastructure and port infrastructure. They reached their highest level since September 2023 Tuesday. The increase in global refinery margins is causing this to happen.

The Haitong Report noted that the "strong diesel market has supported oil prices, but the persistent crude supply is keeping investors cautious to chase further gains in crude."

A senior White House official stated on Monday that U.S. president Donald Trump was willing to sign legislation moving through Congress adding new Russian sanctions as long as it retained his final authority to implement the law.

The oil price should be supported by further secondary sanctions against Russian crude buyers. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger; Sam Li in Beijing, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)