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Oil prices fall as the market looks to OPEC+ production increase and US tariffs

Oil prices fall as the market looks to OPEC+ production increase and US tariffs

The oil prices dropped for a third time on Wednesday, as major producers increased their production plans in April. This was coupled with fears that U.S. Tariffs on Canada Mexico and China would slow the economic growth and impact fuel demand.

Brent futures dropped 24 cents or 0.3% to $70.80 per barrel at 0500 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI), which is a blend of oil from Texas and Louisiana, fell 58 cents or 0.9% to $67.68 per barrel.

The previous session saw the contract settlements at levels that were close to the multi-month lows.

"Unfavourable demand-supply dynamics have created a dual impact, with uncertainty over tariffs posing downside risk to global growth and, in turn, oil consumption," said Yeap Jun Rong.

"OPEC+ is on track to boost production in April. Meanwhile, optimism about a possible resolution of the Ukraine-Russian conflict increases the chances that Russian supplies will return to the market," Yeap said.

OPEC+ (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, its Allies, including Russia), a group that is known as OPEC+ has decided to increase production for the first since 2022.

The group plans to increase production by 138,000 barrels a day starting in April. This is the first of planned monthly increases that will unwind nearly 6 million barrels a day of reductions, which equals nearly 6% global demand.

Tuesday, a 25% tariff was imposed on all Mexican imports. A 10% tariff was imposed on Canadian energy. And the duties on Chinese products were doubled to 20%. The Trump administration also imposed tariffs of 25% on all Canadian imports.

Economists see the self-declared U.S. trade war declared by President Donald Trump as a recipe that could lead to fewer jobs, slower economic growth and higher prices which may kill demand. Lower economic growth is likely to impact fuel consumption for the world's largest oil consumer.

The Trump administration announced on Tuesday that it would end a license granted by the U.S. to U.S. oil company Chevron to operate in Venezuela since 2022 and to export its oil.

In a Wednesday note, ING commodities analysts said that the move could put 200,000 barrels of oil per day at risk.

They added that "this will force U.S. refiners to look for alternatives heavy grades of crude oils, while other suppliers such as Canada and Mexico face tariffs."

Market sources cited American Petroleum Institute data on Tuesday to report that U.S. crude stockpiles fell by 1,46 million barrels during the week ending February 28. Investors are now awaiting government data due on Wednesday on U.S. stocks. Reporting by Arathy S. Somasekhar, Jeslyn Lerh and Christian Schmollinger; editing by Edwina Gibbs and Edwina Schmollinger

(source: Reuters)