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Risk premium on oil drops as Gaza ceasefire reduces it

The oil prices dropped on Thursday as Israel and Hamas reached an agreement on the first phase of their plan to end the Gaza war, which eased geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Meanwhile, the strength of the U.S. Dollar weighed down on commodities.

Brent crude futures fell 34 cents or 0.51% to $65.91 per barrel at 0413 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude fell 38 cents or 0.61% to $62.17.

Kelvin Wong, senior market analyst at OANDA, said that WTI crude was trading on the lower side of the pendulum due to the reduction in geopolitical risks premium caused by the Israel-Hamas agreement.

U.S. president Donald Trump announced that Israel and Hamas reached a long sought-after deal on a Gaza ceasefire, including the release of hostages. The plan was to end the war that has raged in the Palestinian enclave for two years.

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said that he will convene the Israeli government on Thursday in order to approve the ceasefire accord.

Investors have been weighing the risk of a regional war escalating into a global conflict that could affect oil supplies.

Michael McCarthy, CEO Moomoo Australia & New Zealand and the investor platform Moomoo Australia, stated that the Gaza ceasefire will not affect the oil supply in Middle East, as OPEC+ haven't met their increased production targets.

The group of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies agreed on Sunday that the November production increase would be smaller than the market expected, thus easing concerns about oversupply.

McCarthy said that the strength of the U.S. Dollar against the Japanese yen, and the euro has a general impact on commodities. Oil priced in dollars has become more costly for investors who hold other currencies.

Investors viewed the stalled progress in a Ukraine peace agreement as maintaining sanctions against Russia.

The Energy Information Administration reported on Wednesday that the total weekly U.S. supply of petroleum products, which is a proxy for U.S. consumption, increased last week to 21,990 million barrels a day. This was the highest since December 2022.

Analysts at JP Morgan said that global oil demand started on a more moderate note in October, as a number of consumption indicators such as container arrivals in the Port of Los Angeles and truck toll mileage in Germany, along with container throughput in China all pointed to a slowdown in activity.

In a note to clients, JP Morgan analysts reported that global oil demand was 105.9 millions bpd on average in the first week of October. This is an increase of 300,000 from last year and 90,000 below their estimates.

They said that the pace of the global crude and product inventory build also slowed. It increased by 8 million barrels in the last week. This was the slowest growth rate over the past five weeks. (Reporting from Florence Tan in Singapore, Georgina McCartney at Houston and Christopher Cushing in Houston)

(source: Reuters)