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Oil costs edge down as extended OPEC+ supply cuts highlight weak need

Oil prices edged lower on Friday, with weak need in focus after the OPEC+ group held off planned supply boosts and extended deep output cuts to the end of 2026.

Brent crude futures fell 6 cents, or 0.1%, to $72.03. per barrel by 0336 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude. futures lost 1 cent to $68.29 per barrel.

For the week, Brent was on track to drop more than 1%, while. WTI hung on to a limited 0.1% gain.

The Company of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and. its allies on Thursday pressed back the start of oil output increases. by 3 months up until April and extended the complete relaxing of. cuts by a year up until completion of 2026.

The group, referred to as OPEC+ and accountable for about half of. the world's oil output, was planning to start relaxing cuts. from October 2024, but a downturn in international demand - especially. in China - and rising output elsewhere have actually forced it to. postpone the plan numerous times.

Sidelining the surprise drawdown in United States unrefined stockpiles. recently and OPEC+ extending plans to ramp up output up until. September 2026, oil rates eased even more amid growing issues. over dented worldwide need and oversupplied markets, stated. Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market expert at Phillip Nova.

With growing concerns over international need for oil in 2025,. even the softening of the US Dollar in the last number of. sessions does not seem to repair the floor underneath oil costs, she. stated.

The most recent extension puts OPEC+ output below major banks'. previous projections, which could offer some assistance for the. market going forward, experts at energy-focused consultancy FGE. stated.

However, issues that supply will still overtake demand. even going into next year weighed on costs further.

Macquarie experts designed Saudi Arabian oil production. remaining in the low-9 million bpd range in 2025, however anticipated. that even with that supply discipline the market would be. oversupplied by more than 1 million bpd.

Checking out next year, we anticipate a heavy surplus, as. non-OPEC supply growth is expected to fulfill the below-trend. need development, decreasing the call on OPEC supply and restricting the. require for OPEC+ to reverse voluntary cuts, they stated in a customer. note.

Markets were also keeping an eye out for the U.S. nonfarm payrolls. report due later on Friday, to see whether it would support. expectations of a rate cut at the U.S. Federal Reserve's next. meeting.

The market is pricing in a 72% possibility that the Fed will. provide a 25-basis-point rate cut when it meets on Dec. 17-18,. up from 66.5% a week ago, CME FedWatch tool showed.

Clearness on rate cuts from the next Fed policy meeting might. feed into need forecasts for oil in 2025, stated Phillip Nova's. Sachdeva.

(source: Reuters)