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Oil prices continue to fall due to oversupply and US demand concerns

The oil prices dropped on Friday. This was in addition to the big drops in the previous session. Concerns about a possible softening in U.S. Demand and a general oversupply were offset by concerns about disruptions of supply due to conflict in the Middle East or war in Ukraine.

Brent crude futures dropped 49 cents or 0.74% to $65.88 per barrel at 0419 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude fell 51 cents or 0.82% to $61.86.

The (U.S. inflation) battle is not yet won. This dampens demand for oil in the world's biggest economy. Even geopolitical turmoil is not enough to sustain oil prices. Fundamentals indicate an oversupply of crude and a lacklustre level of demand, said Priyanka Sackdeva, senior analyst at brokerage Phillip Nova.

The government reported on Thursday that U.S. consumer price indexes in August rose by the highest in seven months, and a large number of first-time unemployment aid applications were filed last week. This has raised expectations that the Federal Reserve may cut interest rates to boost economic growth next week. This would then increase demand for oil.

The oil price rose by up to 2% on Monday, due to the possibility of disruptions in trade or production from war and conflict. However, the benchmarks began falling on Thursday. They have now erased the gains made earlier this week.

Losses began when the International Energy Agency, in its monthly report, said that world oil supplies would increase more quickly than expected due to planned production increases by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) and its allies such as Russia.

OPEC's own report did not change its high growth predictions for global oil demand in 2025 and 2026. It said the world economy maintained a strong growth trend.

SDIC Futures reported in a daily update that the crude market is constantly bouncing between concerns over short-term disruptions and surplus supply pressures. However, geopolitical fears are reducing support for prices.

OPEC+ announced on Sunday that it would increase its oil production quotas starting in October, as Saudi Arabia, the group's leading member, tries to regain market shares.

Saudi Arabian crude oil exports are expected to increase, according to several sources on Thursday. The state-controlled Aramco is shipping 1.65 million barrels of crude oil per day to China in October. This is a sharp rise from the 1.43 million barrels per days allocated to China in September.

The IEA reported that in Russia, which is expected to be the second largest producer of crude oil behind the U.S. by 2024, revenues from the sale of crude and petroleum products declined in August, reaching one of their lowest levels since the beginning of the conflict in Ukraine.

A report released by the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday showed that U.S. crude oil stocks increased last week, rising by 3.9 millions barrels to 424.6million barrels. (Reporting and editing by Tom Hogue, Lewis Jackson and Sam Li in Beijing)

(source: Reuters)