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US inventories and the Japan trade agreement indicate a stronger demand for oil.

US inventories and the Japan trade agreement indicate a stronger demand for oil.

Early trading on Wednesday saw oil prices stabilize after three straight sessions of falling. A U.S.-Japan trade agreement signaled progress in tariff negotiations, and a survey showed that U.S. crude stocks fell last week indicating a stronger demand.

Brent crude futures were up 33 cents or 0.48% to $68.92 per barrel at 0023 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude Futures rose 33 cents or 0.51% to $65.64 a barrel.

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump announced that the U.S. had reached a deal with Japan that included a 15% tariff for U.S. imports coming from Japan. He said that Japan agreed to invest $550 billion dollars in the U.S.

The price of oil had dropped in the previous session, after the EU announced it was considering countermeasures to U.S. Tariffs. Hopes for a deal before the deadline on August 1 faded.

A poll conducted on Tuesday showed that the U.S. crude stockpiles, as well as distillate and gasoline stocks, were all expected to be down last week.

Nine analysts polled ahead of the weekly inventory data, estimated that crude inventories had fallen by an average of 1.6 million barrels during the week ending July 18.

Market sources cited American Petroleum Institute data on Tuesday to report that U.S. crude, gasoline, and distillate stocks decreased last week, while inventories increased.

The U.S. Energy Secretary said that sanctions against Russian oil could be considered to end the conflict in Ukraine. This is another positive sign for the market.

The EU agreed on Friday to its 18th package of sanctions against Russia. This included a lower price cap for Russian crude. Analysts said that the lack of U.S. involvement would hamper the effectiveness of the package. (Reporting and editing by Muralikumar Aantharaman; Colleen howe)

(source: Reuters)