In a sign supply is plentiful, industry group the American
Petroleum Institute said on Tuesday U.S. crude stocks had risen
by 9.9 million barrels - more than forecast. The U.S.
government's supply report is due at 1430 GMT.
Brent crude <LCOc1>, the global benchmark, was down 37 cents to
$76.07 a barrel at 1020 GMT. It fell earlier in the day to
$75.11, the lowest since Aug. 24. U.S. crude <CLc1> was
unchanged at $66.43.
"Rising oil inventories and growing petro-nations' output calm
the supply fears related to the Iran oil embargo," said Norbert
Ruecker, head of macro and commodity research at Swiss bank
Julius Baer.
Crude fell sharply in the previous session, with Brent closing
down 4.3 percent.
"This price movement comes as little surprise with attention now
clearly being focused on the weakening economic situation and
gloomy demand outlook," analysts at JBC Energy said in a report.
A sell-off in equities due to concern about the economic outlook
also weighed on crude on Tuesday. Forecasters such as the
International Energy Agency already expect slower oil-demand
growth for 2019 due to a slowing economy.
On Wednesday, Asian stocks edged up as signs of stimulus from
China propped up sentiment and European shares attempted a
tentative rebound.
While U.S. sanctions on Iran, which start on Nov. 4, are
expected to tighten supplies, other producers, notably top
exporter Saudi Arabia, are already pumping more oil and willing
to increase further if needed.
Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said on Tuesday that Saudi
Arabia would step up to "meet any demand that materialises to
ensure customers are satisfied".
Some analysts say nonetheless that prices could rebound before
the end of the year.
"We still see Brent reaching $85 per barrel by year-end," said
U.S. bank Morgan Stanley.
Next year, slower demand and additional U.S. shale oil
production should contribute to lower prices, Ruecker of Julius
Baer added.
"While in the near term prices are at risk from any further
supply disruption, oil should trend lower heading into 2019 as
slowing emerging market demand growth and the shale boom restore
the oil market's supply cushion," he said.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein; Editing by Mark
Potter and David Evans)
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