Oil prices slip ahead of U.S. inventory report

LONDON, Nov 10 (Reuters) – Oil prices slipped after early gains on Wednesday, though a potential drop in U.S. crude stocks and tighter supplies capped losses.

Brent crude futures were at $84.56 a barrel by 1101 GMT, down 22 cents, or 0.3%, after touching a session high of $85.50.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell by 49 cents, or 0.6%, to $83.66 after rising close to $85.

Market sources said that API data showed U.S. crude stocks declined by 2.5 million barrels for the week to Nov. 5, defying analysts’ estimates for a 2.1 million build in crude stocks in a Reuters poll.

“After the strong rally over the last few days, oil prices are in a wait and see mode,” said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

“Market participants will closely watch if the EIA will confirm the large draws for crude and oil products and on the next moves from the U.S. administration.”

U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) official oil inventory data is expected later on Wednesday.

Further underpinning the view the market remains tight, trading giant Vitol Group’s CEO, Russell Hardy, said on Tuesday that oil demand had returned to pre-pandemic levels and demand in the first quarter of 2022 could exceed 2019 levels. read more

“The possibility of a spike to $100 per barrel is clearly there,” Hardy told the Reuters Commodities Summit.

Market gains on Tuesday were mainly driven by a short-term outlook from the EIA, which projected gasoline prices would fall over the next few months.

That was a key factor U.S. President Joe Biden had been watching to determine whether to release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve amid concern over recent soaring gasoline prices. read more

Hardy said that a potential SPR release is likely to have only a short-term impact on the oil market.

“The EIA report … does curb concerns that the U.S. will release oil from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR),” Commonwealth Bank analyst Vivek Dhar said in a note.Reporting by Ahmad Ghaddar Additional reporting by Sonali Paul and Florence Tan in Singapore Editing by David Goodman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

Dubai’s manic year keeps running — AED 23.8bn in one last-November week

Dubai’s property market has moved beyond the “hot market” phase into a new era of…

1 day ago

DUBAI REAL ESTATE’S RECORD RUN CONTINUES AS 2025 PROPERTY SALES CLIMB TO AED624.1 BILLION

Busy November drives deals to new high of 19,016 so far Dubai, UAE, 3rd December,…

4 days ago

How Invictus’s MCB deal could reshape African food supply chains

Dubai-based Invictus Investment has quietly done something strategically loud. The agrifood and FMCG trader announced…

1 week ago

The Oasis: How the UAE Became West Asia’s Fulcrum of Transformation

Abu Dhabi — For decades, commentators have blamed a perceived “knowledge deficit” for parts of…

1 week ago

Dubai’s Ambitious Drive: A 22 Million sq ft Auto Market to Reboot Global Car Trade

Dubai has announced a massive 22-million-sq-ft Auto Market with 1,500 showrooms, a DP World–led project…

1 week ago

DUBAI’S ULTRA-LUXURY SECTOR EVOLVES TO CREATENEW ‘GOLDEN TRIANGLE’ OF WEALTH’

Dubai’s ultra-luxury villa market is evolving into a stable global asset class, with record AED40M+…

2 weeks ago