Oil prices mixed, even after big drop in US crude stocks

09 Feb, 2022

NEW YORK: Oil prices were trading near unchanged on Wednesday, paring gains after spiking on data showing after US inventories dropped by nearly 5 million barrels and demand rose to an all-time high.

Brent crude futures gained 30 cents, or 0.3%, to $91.08 a barrel by 12:01 p.m. EST (1701 GMT). US West Texas Intermediate crude fell 25 cents to $89.11 a barrel.

US crude stocks fell by 4.8 million barrels last week, including a sharp drawdown at the key Cushing hub, as overall product supplied, a proxy for demand, hit a record 21.9 million barrels per day over the past four weeks, government data showed on Wednesday.

The heavy activity, and ramp-up in US refinery processing, suggests the market could be looking at tight supplies for coming months as well.

"This is (refinery) turnaround season which makes this report even more surprising," said Robert Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho. "This could be crude oil runs to refineries, refiners trying to restock inventories. We're exporting a large amount of crude as well."

Oil falls $1 on positive signals from US-Iran talks

The prospect of increased supply from Iran pressured the market this week, and the crude benchmarks slid about 2% on Tuesday as Washington resumed indirect talks with Iran to revive a nuclear deal.

An agreement could lift US sanctions on Iranian oil and quickly add supply to the market, although a number of vital issues need to be resolved.

"If US-Iran talks continue to progress, this (price) level should come under some pressure, while a collapse of negotiations could be the catalyst that drives the price towards triple-figure territory," said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at OANDA.

Industry worries over political risks worldwide had ebbed a bit on Wednesday, several analysts said.

"The concerns about a further escalation of the Russia-Ukraine conflict appear to have eased somewhat following the latest diplomatic efforts, which is reducing the risk premium on the oil price," said Commerzbank commodities analyst Carsten Fritsch.

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