Oil down on rising US stockpiles, cautious supply expectations

Oil down on rising US stockpiles, cautious supply expectations

Business

Expert believes OPEC+ will reverse production cuts from July which will further reduces prices

Follow on
Follow us on Google News

SINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters/Web Desk) – Oil prices fell on Wednesday as industry data showed a pile-up in crude and fuel inventories in the US, a sign of weak demand, and cautious supply expectations emerged ahead of an OPEC+ policy meeting next month.

Brent crude oil futures fell $1.37, or 1.65 per cent, to $81.79 a barrel by 09:42 GMT. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell $1.41, or 1.80pc, to $76.97 a barrel.

During the past month, the Brent is down by over 8.50pc while the WTI has fallen by more than 10pc.

US crude stocks rose by 509,000 barrels in the week ended May 3, market sources said, citing American Petroleum Institute figures. Gasoline and distillate fuel inventories also rose, they said.

"API numbers released overnight were moderately bearish due to stock builds in both crude and products... Concern over weaker-than-usual U.S. gasoline demand and this stock-build have weighed on the prompt RBOB gasoline crack," ING analysts said in a client note.

Official US government data on stockpiles is due at 1430 GMT. Analysts polled by Reuters expect U.S. crude oil inventories to have fallen by about 1.1 million barrels last week.

Cautious expectations on supply cuts from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies (OPEC+) ahead of a June 1 policy meeting also weighed on markets.

"Oil prices have come under further pressure as noise around OPEC+ production policy grows," the ING analysts said.

"Expectations are that members will extend their additional voluntary supply cuts beyond the second quarter of this year."

Meanwhile, hopes of a ceasefire in Gaza have also put pressure on oil prices in recent sessions, with some analysts saying the risk premium on oil declined in tandem.

"The fall in oil prices since Iran and Israel's back-and-forth attacks suggests that some of the risk premium in prices has now unwound," said economist Bill Weatherburn from Capital Economics in a client note.

"Prices continue to be supported by OPEC+ production cuts but we suspect that members will gradually unwind these cuts from July, pushing oil prices lower," he added.

The US believes negotiations on a Gaza ceasefire should be able to close the gaps between Israel and Hamas. US Central Intelligence Agency Director Bill Burns will travel to Israel on Wednesday for talks with the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other top officials, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Some analyst expectations that short-term demand remains well-supported limited overall price declines.

"Much talk of economic run cuts in recent weeks is overblown in our opinion, with margins still healthy enough, which means rather that Asian demand could rather pick up once turnarounds peak and diminish," said Sparta Commodities analyst Neil Crosby.