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Oil prices are little changed, but they will suffer the steepest quarterly and monthly losses since 2020

The oil prices were little altered on Tuesday, but they were heading for their largest monthly and 'quarterly' losses since the COVID-19 Pandemic early in '2020. Investors were looking at potential U.S. - Iran talks in Doha amid the strained -interim ceasefire of the four-month long war.

Brent futures dropped 13 cents or 0.2% to $73.02 per barrel at 12:34 pm EDT (1634 GMT), whereas U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) fell 89 cents or 1.3% to $69.86 per barrel.

The two crude benchmarks are close to the levels they reached on February 27, just before the U.S. and Israel war against Iran began. Brent closed that day at $72.48 per barrel, while WTI closed the same day at $67.02.

The market may not have priced in a risk premium but stranded vessels are now available due to the increase of ships leaving the Gulf. This has created a temporary surge of new supply, according to UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

Morgan Stanley has said that it models a global oil surplus of 4.8 millions barrels per day by 2027.

A Qatari official stated on Tuesday that top U.S. diplomats in Doha would not be holding a high-level Iran meeting. This casts doubt on the progress of the efforts to end the Iran War and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Before the war, about 20% of world oil supply passed through this strait.

Majed Al-Ansari, Qatar Foreign Ministry spokesperson, told media at a briefing that there would be no senior level discussions this week, but instead, technical discussions on regional security issues.

On Tuesday, the arrival of U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in law Jared Kushner in Doha and his envoy Steve Witkoff followed a weekend of exchanges of fire that put to the test the interim agreement between the United States of America and Iran signed on June 17.

The 14-point agreement gave both sides 60 days to negotiate an end to the hostilities and resolve difficult issues, including the future of Iran’s nuclear program.

Future Milestones

The lack of movement in crude prices on Tuesday kept both benchmarks in oversold territory, with Brent at 13 consecutive days and WTI at 11 consecutive days.

Brent fell by?about 21 % for the month of June, after a drop of 19 % in May. This would be the biggest monthly drop since it fell by a record-breaking 55% in March of 2020 due to COVID destruction.

Brent fell by about 38% during the second quarter, after rising 94% during?the first. This would be the biggest quarterly drop since it fell by a record breaking 66% in first quarter 2020. Last quarter's gain of 94% was the highest since futures rose by a record 142% during the third quarter 1990.

Brent crude will no longer be included in the supply of five North Sea crude oils grades that support the Brent benchmark for the first time since 2021.

U.S. OIL Inventories

The American Petroleum Institute?trade group and the U.S. Energy Information Administration will release their weekly storage reports on Tuesday.

Analysts estimate that energy companies removed 4.1 million barrels from storage in the week ending June 26.

If the report is correct, it would be the first time that energy companies have pulled crude from?storage 10 weeks in a?row, matching a record set in January 2018. This compares to an increase of 3.8 millions barrels during the same week in 2017, and a decline of an average of 5.5million barrels for the last five years (from 2021 to 2025) Reporting by Scott DiSavino, Robert Harvey and Anushree Mathur in Bengaluru, and Trixie Yap, Singapore. Editing by Alex Lawler and Susan Fenton.

(source: Reuters)