Brent crude prices for September fell $1.06, or 0.9%, to $106.29
a barrel by 0946 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI)
crude for August slipped $1.09, or 1%, to $103.13 per barrel.
The WTI contract will expire on Wednesday.
The more active September WTI contract was at $99.64 a barrel,
down $1.10.
Oil prices whipsawed in the previous session, caught in a
tug-of-war between supply fears caused by Western sanctions on
Russia and expectations of economic weakness and reduced demand
as central bankers indicated they will raise interest rates to
combat inflation.
On Friday, open interest in New York Mercantile Exchange futures
fell to its lowest since September 2015 as concerns that the
Federal Reserve will keep raising U.S. interest rates led
investors to cut their exposure to risky assets.
"People have been switching out of Delta 1 products – just being
long the futures or long via the index – into options because of
the sharp pullback," Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI
Asset Management, said in a note.
Adding to bearish sentiment, crude stocks in the United States
rose by about 1.9 million barrels for the week ended July 15,
according to market sources citing American Petroleum Institute
figures on Tuesday. That was close to the forecast for a rise of
1.4 million barrels in a Reuters poll.
Official weekly crude and fuel inventory data from the U.S.
Energy Information Administration (EIA) is expected on Wednesday
at 1530 GMT and traders are watching out for implied demand. [EIA/S]
Analysts, however, expect oil prices to continue to see support
from supply tightness, even as U.S. shale oil production expands
at a modest pace.
"With little room for OPEC+ to increase production, the oil
market will struggle to balance out in the coming months,
thereby propping up prices," Stephen Brennock of oil broker PVM
said.
Limited supplies have kept Brent above $105/bbl and prompt Brent
inter-month spreads in wide backwardation at about $4.40 a
barrel. Front-month prices are higher than those in future
months in a backwardated market.
(Additional reporting by Florence Tan in Singapore and Laura
Sanicola in New York; editing by Barbara Lewis)
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