Oil
prices fell Wednesday as traders awaited the release of US crude
inventory data, which are expected to show a further rise in stockpiles.
At around 1100 GMT, the US benchmark West Texas Intermediate
(WTI) for delivery in April slid 74 cents to stand at $33.66 a barrel.
In London, Brent North Sea crude for May shed 36 cents to $36.45 a barrel compared with Monday’s close.
Crude futures had risen Tuesday on fresh Russian calls for a production freeze to reduce the global supply glut.
“US crude oil inventories increasing is almost becoming a norm.
Inventories are already at a historic high” and markets are taking a
nonchalant stance towards a continued inch upwards, said Daniel Ang,
analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
“US production, on the other hand, is slightly more interesting as it
is finally starting to show corrections. We highly expect to see US oil
production drop a lot more now that prices are in the $30 region, which
could result in the easing of global oil supply,” he added in a note.
A Bloomberg News survey ahead of Wednesday’s Energy Information
Administration (EIA) report showed that US crude stockpiles probably
increased 3.4 million barrels from an 86-year high last week.
The EIA is projected to report that supplies of gasoline and
distillate fuel, a category that includes diesel and heating oil,
dropped, Bloomberg added.
Oil prices had risen Tuesday on increasing optimism of an output
freeze to shore up the market as Russia said domestic oil groups
supported the proposal.
Opening a meeting with Russian oil group chiefs, President Vladimir
Putin said Energy Minister Alexander Novak had led discussions on
forging a freeze agreement between producer countries.
He said the idea was to “fix Russia’s 2016 production level at that
of January,” which was a post-Soviet record of 10.8 million barrels per
day on average.
The market gained a lift in the latter half of February when OPEC
kingpin Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC member Russia agreed to freeze output
to January levels, if other major producers followed suit.
But disappointment that there was no output cut, and skepticism that
such a freeze could be agreed, has contributed to recent market
volatility.Thanks for reading
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