Latest News

Oil prices fall on the back of oversupply, but sanctions keep declines in check

The price of oil fell on Wednesday, as a report from the industry showed that crude inventories were higher in the U.S.

Brent crude futures fell 11 cents or 0.2% to $64.78 per barrel at 0510 GMT after rising 1.1% the previous session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude Futures were down by 9 cents or 0.2% at $60.65 per barrel after gaining 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, according to 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 rose by 577,000.

The ING commodities analysts said that the overall report was "relatively bearish", but they warned that "market participants seem more concerned with supply risks than the likelihood of a future surplus."

The U.S. has imposed sanctions against major Russian producers Rosneft, and Lukoil. Companies have until November 21, 2011 to end their business with these firms.

On Monday, the U.S. Treasury said that sanctions have already reduced Russia's oil revenues and will eventually reduce its export volume. China and India are already switching to other suppliers of crude oil.

Emril Jamil is a senior oil analyst with LSEG. He said that benchmark prices were range-bound as the market was focusing on the impact of the sanctions (November 21). However, there are also downward pressures with an oversupply feeling in the background.

Investors reacted positively to the U.S. sanction and the Ukrainian attack on Russian refineries, export terminals and oil pipelines. They are now more concerned about fuel and crude disruptions.

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.

Analysts at Chinese brokerage Haitong Futures stated that the "strong diesel market has supported oil prices but the persistent crude supply is keeping investors cautious to chase further gains in crude."

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.

(source: Reuters)