Business World

Crude prices fall as US refiners ramp up output

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HOUSTON —Oil prices fell 2.5% on Wednesday, reversing early gains as traders grew less worried about a supply crunch after government data showed US refiners ramped up output, and as crude futures followed Wall Street lower.

Brent crude settled down $2.82, or 2.5%, at $109.11 a barrel. US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude fell $2.81, or 2.5%, to $109.59 a barrel.

Both benchmarks gave up early gains of $2-$3 a barrel following a change in risk sentiment as equity markets fell, said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

Brent remained at an unusual discount to WTI a day after settling below the US benchmark for the first time since May 2020. Traders and analysts cited strong export demand and tightening US crude stockpiles.

US crude inventorie­s fell by 3.4 million barrels last week, government data showed, an unexpected drawdown, as refiners ramped up output in response to tight product inventorie­s and near-record exports that have forced US diesel and gasoline prices to record levels.

US gasoline prices fell 5%, two days after touching a record high.

Capacity use on both the East Coast and Gulf Coast was above 95%, putting those refineries close to their highest possible running rates.

The dollar strengthen­ed and global stocks retreated on concerns about economic growth and rising inflation.

Bearish sentiment also followed reports that the United States is planning to relax sanctions against Venezuela and allow Chevron Corp. to negotiate oil licenses with state producer PDVSA.

“The perception that we could see some more supply coming Venezuela coming into the market, along with the equity markets, it’s causing some profit taking in a much-needed technical correction in the crude,” said Dennis Kissler, senior vice president for trading at BOK Financial.

The EU’s failure to persuade Hungary to lift its veto on a proposed embargo on Russian oil was adding price pressure.

Ongoing supply concerns remained supportive. Russian crude output in April fell by nearly 9% from the previous month, an internal OPEC+ report showed on Tuesday, as Western sanctions on Moscow curbed exports.

On the demand side, hopes of further lockdown easing in China boosted expectatio­ns of a recovery. Authoritie­s allowed 864 of Shanghai’s financial institutio­ns to resume work, sources said, and China has relaxed some COVID test rules for US and other travelers. —

 ?? ?? Source: REUTERS
Source: REUTERS

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