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Oil prices drop amid concerns over the US economy and market oversupply

Oil prices drop amid concerns over the US economy and market oversupply

The oil price fell for a second time on Thursday after the Federal Reserve reduced interest rates, as was expected. Traders focused on the U.S. economic situation and the excess supply.

Brent crude futures dropped 13 cents or 0.19% to $67.82 per barrel at 0417 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Futures fell 18 cents or 0.28% to $63.87.

In response to signs of weakness on the job market, the Fed lowered its policy rate a quarter percentage point by Wednesday. It also indicated that it would lower borrowing costs steadily over the remainder of the year.

Low borrowing costs usually boost oil demand and drive prices higher.

But the recent move and the hint that there will be two more cuts in this year were already priced into the market, according to Priyanka Sahdeva, a Phillip Nova senior analyst.

She said that Powell's message of negativity, the Fed chair, was what caught markets' interest.

He emphasized weakening employment markets and sticky inflation, making the cuts look more like risk management than demand boosters.

Claudio Galimberti is the chief economist at Rystad and the global director of the market analysis. He wrote a note to clients that the Fed's intention to cut rates further indicates the policymakers' assessment of the economic risk from unemployment as being higher than the inflationary threat.

The market was also affected by the persistent oversupply of oil and the soft fuel demand from the United States, the largest oil consumer in the world.

The U.S. crude stockpiles declined sharply in the last week, as imports plunged to a new record low and exports surged to near two-year levels, according to data released by the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday.

The market was expecting a 1 million barrel increase in stockpiles. A 4 million barrel rise, however, has raised concerns about the demand in this world's largest oil consumer, and pushed prices up. (Reporting from Katya Glubkova in Singapore and Siyi LIU; Editing by Christopher Cushing, Tom Hogue).

(source: Reuters)