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Oil prices drop as the market focuses on excess supply and US-China trade tensions

Oil prices drop as the market focuses on excess supply and US-China trade tensions

The oil prices continued to fall on Wednesday as investors considered the International Energy Agency warnings of a surplus supply in 2026, and the U.S./China trade tensions which could reduce demand.

Brent crude futures dropped 21 cents or 0.3% to $62.18 a bar by 0425 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Futures dropped 16 cents or 0.3% to $58.54 a bar.

The previous trading session saw both contracts close at lows of five months.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) said that the global oil market may face a surplus of up to 4 million barrels a day next year, a larger glut than its earlier predictions, as OPEC+ and its rivals increase production and demand remains sluggish.

The market is focused on the excess supply amid mixed signals of demand. Emril Jamil is a senior oil analysts at LSEG. He said that ebbing geopolitical risk and escalating tensions in trade are adding to the pressure on prices.

In the last week, the trade dispute between China and the United States, two of the largest oil consumers in the world, has re-emerged. Both countries have imposed additional port fees for ships transporting cargo between them. This will increase trading costs, disrupt freight flow and likely lower economic output.

The focus will be on the recent escalation of trade tensions between China and the US, and the risks that this poses to the global economic system," said Tony Sycamore.

Tensions have increased between the two world's largest economies after China announced last week a major expansion in rare earth export controls. U.S. president Donald Trump has threatened to increase tariffs on Chinese products to 100%, and tighten export restrictions of software from November 1.

Yang An, an analyst at Haitong Futures, said that the current oil price is largely determined by the level of global oversupply as reflected in the changes in inventories.

The weekly inventory report will give traders a good idea of the demand in the United States. A preliminary poll indicated that U.S. crude stockpiles were likely to have increased last week while gasoline and distillate stocks are likely to have decreased.

Six analysts surveyed by estimated that on average crude inventories increased by around 200,000 barrels during the week ending October 10.

The American Petroleum Institute's weekly industry report is due at 4:30 pm EDT (2030 GMT), and the U.S. Energy Information Administration will release its data at 10:30 am EDT (1430 GMT), on Thursday.

The delay is due to Monday's Columbus Day/Indigenous Peoples' Day. Sam Li reported from Beijing, and Jeslyn Leh in Singapore. Sonali Paul and Christian Schmollinger edited the report.

(source: Reuters)