Crude oil prices at the outset went under pressure following yesterday's EIA's inventory data.
Brent dropped to $43.5 per barrel while WTI cost less than $40 per barrel for the first time since the end of August. Prices recouped their losses in the later course of trading, however. The ample supply situation should prevent prices from climbing any higher.
According to the US Department of Energy, US crude oil stocks grew by 252,000 barrels last week that was less than expected, and indeed the smallest increase in the last eight weeks.
The significantly less pronounced inventory build as compared with the previous week was due to lower imports and a higher rate of crude oil processing.
Crude oil stocks at Cushing rose by 1.5 million barrels, which is a sharper increase than anticipated but one which tallies nonetheless with the API survey.
The ongoing robust level of crude oil production is likely to have played its part in this, having fallen only slightly week-on-week and still remaining only just below a three-month high.
On NYME, WTI crude futures for delivery in December rose up to $41.55 a barrel.
WTI crude oil futures (CL!1) extended losses from last week's close at 40.74 to 40.06, but that was the time when bulls became alert to push the prices higher to current levels.
Global oil production is outpacing demand following a boom in U.S. shale oil output and after a decision by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) last year not to cut their supply quota.
According to recent estimates, OPEC mined approx 31.54 million barrels a day in last month, close to record-highs, as major producers led by UAE focused on defending market share by keeping production high. As the oil prices have an impact on worldwide economy, some volatility for the currencies, especially for the CAD is anticipated.


In a rebuke to Trump, the Supreme Court rules that birthright citizenship is the law of the land
AI can be a personal trainer in your pocket – but is it safe?
Part II — The listing: NFTs as bottle-stamps, and a vault the family is in no rush to sell
Michael Burry Shorts Tesla at $416 as AI and Semiconductor Bearish Bets Expand
Europe Heatwave Creates Growth Opportunity for Carrier, Trane, and Johnson Controls, Citi Says
The government is ‘doubling down’ on its social media ban. But bigger penalties for platforms aren’t enough
A Korean Family Spent 34 Years Hoarding Chinese Tea. Now They're Putting It on the Blockchain.
Morgan Stanley Names BAE Systems Top European Defence Stock Despite Lower Price Target
Open-Source AI Models Gain Ground as Enterprises Seek Lower-Cost Alternatives, Citi Says 



