Oil prices soften but supply tightness trims losses
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[July 19, 2022] By
Ahmad Ghaddar
LONDON (Reuters) -Oil prices softened on
Tuesday after soaring by more than $5 barrel in the previous session on
expectations that U.S. crude inventories may have risen last week, but
tight supplies and a weaker dollar curbed losses.
Brent crude futures for September settlement fell 68 cents or 0.6% to
$105.59 a barrel by 0949 GMT. The contract rose 5.1% on Monday, the
biggest percentage gain since April 12.
WTI crude futures for August delivery fell by 32 cents, or 0.3%, to
$102.28 a barrel. The contract climbed 5.1% on Monday and the largest
percentage gain since May 11.
The August WTI contract expires on Wednesday and the more actively
traded September contract was at $98.85 a barrel, down 57 cents, or
0.6%.
The forecast of oil inventories in the United States, the world's
biggest oil consumer, was that crude and distillate supplies may have
risen last week while gasoline stockpiles likely fell, according to a
preliminary Reuters poll.
Oil prices have been whipsawed between concerns about supply as Western
sanctions on Russian crude and fuel supplies over the Ukraine conflict
have disrupted trade flows to refiners and end-users and rising worries
that central bank efforts to tame surging inflation may trigger a
recession that would cut future fuel demand.
"Prices climbed aggressively as the tight state of affairs on the supply
front shifted back into the spotlight," Stephen Brennock from brokerage
PVM said.
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An aerial view shows tugboats helping a crude oil tanker to berth at
an oil terminal, off Waidiao Island in Zhoushan, Zhejiang province,
China July 18, 2022. cnsphoto via REUTERS
U.S. President Joe Biden visited top oil exporter Saudi Arabia last week, hoping
to strike a deal on an oil production boost to tame fuel prices
However, officials from Saudi Arabia, the de facto leader of the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), did not give clear assurances an
output increase was secured.
The kingdom's foreign minister said on Tuesday that he saw no shortage of oil in
the market, but a lack of oil refining capacity, making it necessary to invest
more in capacity to process crude oil into various oil products.
"As of today, we don't see a lack of oil in the market. There is a lack of
refining capacity, which is also an issue, so we need to invest more in refining
capacity," Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud told reporters in
Tokyo.
Oil prices were backed by a softer U.S. dollar on Tuesday, which stood around a
one-week low, making greenback-dominated oil slightly cheaper for buyers holding
other currencies.
(Additional reporting by Muyu Xu in Singapore; editing by David Evans)
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