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Oil drops from 7-week peak as traders consider supply-demand uncertainty

Oil drops from 7-week peak as traders consider supply-demand uncertainty

The oil prices fell in Asian trade Thursday. They had risen to a seven-week-high in the previous session, but investors pulled their money out of the market due to the uncertainty surrounding the outlook for supply and demand.

Brent futures dropped 26 cents or 0.4% to $69.05 per barrel at 0350 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures also fell 27 cents or 0.4% to $64.72 per barrel.

The benchmarks both gained 2.5% Wednesday, reaching their highest level since August 1. This was due to a drop in U.S. crude oil inventories that surprised many and fears about the impact of Ukraine's attack on Russia's infrastructure on energy supplies.

"Oil appears to have hit a ceiling with softer demand (seasonal), and increasing OPEC+ supply into Q4. The recent gains are more sentimental than fundamental. Therefore, unless a new surprise emerges, Brent will likely consolidate, with a slight downward bias, said Priyanka Sackdeva, Senior Market Analyst at Phillip Nova.

Sachdeva said that morning deals saw some profit-taking. He added that the return Kurdish supplies has reignited "fears about an oversupply narrative" and is driving a drop in prices from their near seven-week-highs.

Eight oil companies reached an agreement with the federal government of Iraq and the Kurdish region government on Wednesday to resume exports.

Haitong Securities reported in a recent report that despite some concerns about Russian supply disruptions on the market, oil prices have remained resilient due to a lack of downward pressure in recent weeks from fundamentals such as supply and demand.

The report stated that as the peak season of demand gradually ends, prices have not yet reflected the expectations for mounting oversupply.

A J.P. Morgan report released on Wednesday showed that the U.S. passenger throughput in September was only 0.2% higher than the same month last year. This is a significant slowdown compared to the robust growth of 1% seen over the two previous months.

The analysts at JP Morgan said that "the U.S. gas demand has also started to decline, reflecting the general moderation of travel trends".

(source: Reuters)