Oil Stock Markets
Oil prices fell on Wednesday, pulled down by weaker stock markets after a
key advocate for free trade in the U.S. government resigned, stoking
concerns Washington will go ahead with import tariffs and risk a trade
war.
For 2019, the EIA forecast a crude production increase of 570,000 bpd to 11.27 million bpd.
Soaring U.S. crude oil production and rising inventories also dragged on crude prices.
Gary
Cohn, economic adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump, seen as a
bulwark against protectionist forces within the government, triggering a more than 1 percent fall in
S&P 500 futures in early Wednesday trade.
Crude oil
followed suit, with Brent futures down 51 cents, or 0.8 percent, from
their previous close at $65.28 per barrel at 0414 GMT.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were at $62.13 a barrel, down 47 cents, or 0.75 percent.
A voice for Wall Street in the White House, Cohn’s move to
resign came after he lost a fight over Trump’s plans for hefty steel and
aluminum import tariffs.
Major powers, including the
European Union and China, have warned that such tariffs could lead to
retaliatory action and trigger a global trade war, which could grind to a
halt economic growth and, by extension, oil consumption.
Traders said oil prices were also weighed down by a reported rise in U.S. crude oil inventories.
Crude
inventories rose by 5.661 million barrels in the week to 426.880
million barrels, data from the American Petroleum Institute showed on
Tuesday.
Official data by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) is due on Wednesday.
Overall, oil supplies are ample despite efforts led by the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and Russia to
withhold output in order to prop up prices.
The
EIA on Tuesday made its latest in a series of upward revisions for U.S.
crude oil production, which it now expects to rise by more than 120,000
barrels per day (bpd) to 11.17 million bpd by the fourth quarter of
2018.
That would take the United States past Russia to
become the world’s biggest oil producer.
The U.S. already passed top
exporter Saudi Arabia late last year.

No comments:
Post a Comment