Business World

Oil prices down slightly after big rise in US refined products

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NEW YORK — Oil prices were down slightly on Wednesday, pressured early by data showing big increases in US refined products but recovered some of the losses later by the signing of a Phase 1 trade deal between Washington and Beijing.

Brent futures lost 49 cents, or 0.8%, to settle at $64 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude ended 42 cents, or 0.7%, lower at $57.81.

“The bullish impetus that we had expected off of today’s weekly EIA report failed to develop and as a result, the complex appears headed for lower levels than we had anticipate­d despite the late session recovery,” Jim Ritterbusc­h, president of trading advisory firm Ritterbusc­h and Associates, said in a note.

Under the Phase 1 trade agreement, China will buy $18.5 billion more in US energy products in the first year and $33.9 billion in the second.

However, commodity traders and analysts remained cautious

— struggling to map out how China will reach the eye-popping amounts it is committing to buy from the US.

Trump said he would remove all US tariffs on Chinese imports as soon as the two countries completed Phase 2 of their trade agreement, adding he does not expect there to be a Phase 3 pact.

Phil Flynn, an analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago, said prices pared early losses on “optimism surroundin­g the US-China trade deal and expectatio­ns that oil demand is going to continue to be solid.”

Earlier, oil prices fell to their lowest in over a month after the US government reported big increases in gasoline and distillate­s inventorie­s and a record crude output.

US gasoline stockpiles last week rose to their highest since February, while distillate inventorie­s jumped to their most since September 2017, according to the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA).

“I think they were able to look past the build in gasoline and distillate­s, realizing that it will probably work itself out in the next couple of weeks,” Mr. Flynn said.

The EIA report also showed crude production for the week ended Jan. 10 rose to 13 million barrels per day (bpd) and a muchbigger-than-expected draw in crude inventorie­s.

Both oil benchmarks were also hit by a report from the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries that said the producer group expected lower demand for its oil in 2020 even as global demand rises, as rival producers grab market share. Output in the US was expected to touch another record in 2020. —

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