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Oil prices rise, Ukraine peace talks and US interest rate decision are in the spotlight

The oil prices were stable on Tuesday, after falling 2% the previous session. Market participants remained focused on the upcoming decision by the U.S. Federal Reserve on interest rates and on peace talks that could end Russia's conflict in Ukraine.

Brent crude futures were down?2 Cents, or 0.03 %, at $62.47 per barrel as of 0101 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was trading at $58.84 - down 4 cents or 0.07%.

The prices of both contracts dropped by over $1 after Iraq re-started production at Lukoil’s West Qurna 2 Oilfield, which is one of the largest in the world.

After talks in London between the President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and leaders from France, Germany, and Britain

Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, said that oil is "keeping to a narrow trading range" until we know more about the outcome of the peace talks.

If the talks fail, we expect oil prices to rise. However, if there is progress and there is the possibility of Russian energy supply returning to the global market, then the prices are expected to fall," he said.

Sources familiar with the issue claim that the Group of Seven and the European Union have been in talks to replace the price cap on Russian crude oil exports by a complete maritime service ban, as a way to reduce Russia's oil revenues.

The Federal Reserve policy decision is also due on Wednesday, and the markets have priced in a 87% chance of a rate cut by a quarter point.

Analysts at BMI predict that the market will be oversupplied with energy in 2026, causing prices to remain under pressure.

BMI said that, "although much depends on OPEC+'s response to lower prices during the first quarter of 2026," we should still see crude prices recovering through the rest of 2026 due to the lower production from U.S. shale activities and steady growth of consumption bringing markets closer into equilibrium. Ashitha Shivprasad, reporting from Bengaluru; and Thomas Derpinghaus.

(source: Reuters)