Oil loses ground as traders fret about oversupply

Glut worries outweigh uncertainty over effect of US sanctions on Rosneft and Lukoil

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Ashitha Shivaprasad

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Emily Chow

Brent crude futures were down 30c, or 0.4%, at $68.16 a barrel by 10.04am GMT, having jumped 3% on Monday.
Picture: SUPPLIED (123RF/EVGENII BASHTA)

Singapore — Oil prices dipped in Asian trade on Tuesday as oversupply concerns outweighed uncertainty over the impact of US sanctions on Russian oil majors Rosneft and Lukoil and optimism over progress toward reopening the US government.

Brent crude futures fell 12c, or 0.2%, to $63.94 a barrel by 4.26am GMT. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was at $59.99 a barrel, down 14c or 0.2%.

Both benchmarks gained about 40c in the previous session.

The longest government shutdown in US history could end this week after the Senate approved a compromise that would restore federal funding. The deal now goes to the House of Representatives, where Speaker Mike Johnson has said he would like to pass it as soon as Wednesday.

While progress toward reopening the government has boosted markets broadly, worries about crude oversupply are keeping a lid on oil prices.

“As Opec production increases grind on, global oil balances are acquiring an increasingly bearish hue on the supply side of the ledger, with demand still trending lower in conjunction with a slowed economic growth path among major oil-consuming countries,” analysts at energy advisory firm Ritterbusch and Associates said in a note.

Earlier this month, Opec+ agreed to increase December output targets by 137,000 barrels a day, the same as for October and November. It also agreed to a pause in increases in the first quarter of next year.

While the oil glut triggered by rising Opec supply has made investors increasingly bearish in recent weeks, US sanctions also remain in focus, ANZ analysts said in a note on Tuesday, referring to President Donald Trump’s latest measures targeting Russian oil majors Rosneft and Lukoil.

Sources told Reuters on Monday that Lukoil declared force majeure at its Iraqi oil field and Bulgaria was poised to seize its Burgas refinery. The force majeure at the West Qurna-2 field in Iraq marks the biggest fallout yet from the sanctions imposed last month.

Elsewhere, the volume of oil stored onboard ships in Asian waters doubled in recent weeks after tightening Western sanctions hit exports to China and India and import quota limits curbed demand from independent Chinese refiners, analysts said. Some refiners in China and India have switched to buying oil from the Middle East and elsewhere.

One potential challenge to oil’s bearish outlook “is the extent to which China will continue to push Russian supplies into strategic stockpiles and whether India will succumb to Trump’s suggestions that the country defer further purchases from Russia”, Ritterbusch said.

Reuters

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