Oil Extends Decline With Supply in Focus Before OPEC+ Meeting
(Bloomberg) — Oil fell for a third day as a key market gauge highlighted oversupply concerns before an OPEC+ supply meeting on Sunday.
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Brent crude for August held losses near $82 after dropping 1.9% on Thursday, while West Texas Intermediate traded below $78 a barrel, with both headed for a monthly drop. The prompt timespread for Brent weakened into a bearish contango structure for the first time since January, indicating oversupply.
Oil is set to end the week little changed after being buffeted between bullish factors — including attacks on a ship in the Red Sea — and bearish sentiment from wider financial markets and signals of a slowdown in Chinese demand. This month’s drop has pared crude’s gain to less than 10% this year, and OPEC+ is expected to prolong output cuts, with the possibility of some restrictions lasting into 2025.
The cartel is also reviewing production capacity levels for members. The United Arab Emirates, Kazakhstan, Iraq, Kuwait and Algeria are among countries whose potential to pump more next year is under scrutiny, according to people familiar with the discussions.
Traders will also be looking for further signals that consumption is picking up in the US at the start of the summer driving season. Implied gasoline demand is mounting a recovery, while crude inventories dropped by the most since January, Energy Information Administration data showed Thursday.
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