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Oil prices drop as markets monitor supply signals from Russia and Ukraine

The oil price fell for the second session in a row on Wednesday as traders awaited an outcome from Russia-Ukraine talks that may boost supply. Meanwhile, concerns about a possible surplus increased due to rising inventories.

Brent crude was up 2 cents or 0.03% at $62.47 as of 0427 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate gained 3 cents or 0.05% to $58.67.

This "weakness" comes despite the continued attacks by Ukraine on Russian energy infrastructure. A note by ING analysts on Wednesday warned that Moscow could start attacking ships from countries that support Ukraine.

Analysts noted that Brent had fallen to its lowest level since last October.

The Russian government announced on Wednesday that the U.S. and Russia failed to reach an agreement on a potential peace deal for Ukraine following a five-hour summit between President Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, President of Russia.

The oil markets are waiting to see the outcome of these talks in order to determine if an agreement can be reached that will allow the lifting of sanctions against Russian companies including Rosneft, Lukoil and other major oil companies. This would help to free up the restricted supply of oil.

The accusations made by Putin on Tuesday, that European powers were hindering U.S. efforts to end the war because they put forward proposals which would be "absolutely inacceptable" to Moscow has increased fears about Russian supply being restricted to buyers like China and India if the talks do not lead to an agreement.

Tony Sycamore is a market analyst at IG. He said that despite the worries of the talks not being conclusive, "concerns about an oversupply and soft demand continue weighing on the crude oil prices, which must stay above the support in the middle $50's in order to avoid a further setback."

After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, the war has intensified and Ukraine now attacks Russian oil infrastructure regularly with drones.

Recent attacks on Russian Black Sea export sites have brought to light the geopolitical implications of the war.

Sources stated on Tuesday that Caspian Pipeline Consortium (which ships oil from Russia to Kazakhstan) aims to finish repairs on its third single-point mooring ahead of schedule. They are aiming to restore the full capacity of oil export after a drone attacked one of their other moorings.

The concern about a crude oil surplus was also heightened by the rising U.S. inventory levels.

Market sources cited API data on Tuesday to report that U.S. crude oil and fuel inventories increased last week.

API sources report that crude stocks increased by 2,48 million barrels during the week ending November 28. Gasoline inventories also rose by 3,14 million barrels. Distillate inventories also rose by 2,88 million barrels.

Later on Wednesday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) will release official government data regarding stockpiles.

(source: Reuters)