SINGAPORE: Oil prices edged lower on Wednesday after rising to two-week highs in the previous session, weighed down by investors waiting for clarity on new US tariffs and expectations of rising crude inventories in the US.
Brent crude futures slipped 15 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $70 a barrel by 8:01 a.m. Saudi time. US West Texas Intermediate crude fell 16 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $68.17 a barrel.
US President Donald Trump’s latest tariff delay provided some hope to major trade partners Japan, South Korea and the European Union that deals to ease duties could still be reached, while bewildering some smaller exporters such as South Africa, and leaving companies with no clarity on the path forward.
Trump pushed Wednesday’s previous deadline to Aug. 1, a date he said on Tuesday was final, declaring: “No extensions will be granted.”
He also said that he would impose a 50 percent tariff on imported copper and soon introduce long-threatened levies on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals, broadening a trade war that has rattled markets worldwide.
“Bearish (price) drivers include uncertainties surrounding the implementation of various types of US tariffs (country-specific and sector-specific goods-based) and potential production hikes from OPEC+,” said OANDA senior market analyst Kelvin Wong.
There is concern that the tariffs could curb demand for oil, and while there was strong travel demand during the US July 4 holiday weekend, data from industry sources showed possible crude inventory builds in the US of around 7.1 million barrels, though fuel products’ stocks were lower.
“Numbers from the API overnight were bearish for oil,” said ING analysts in a client note, adding that “changes in refined products were more constructive.”
Official data from the US Energy Information Administration is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday.
OPEC+ oil producers were set for another big output boost for September as they complete both the unwinding of voluntary production cuts by eight members, and the United Arab Emirates’ move to a larger quota, five sources said.
This followed a Saturday announcement from the group approving a 548,000 barrels per day supply increase for August.
“Oil prices have stayed surprisingly resilient in the face of accelerated OPEC+ supply additions,” said DBS Bank’s energy sector team lead Suvro Sarkar.
Sarkar attributed the support to peak seasonal demand and the expectation that on-the-ground supply would not increase as much because some OPEC+ members would compensate for having overproduced earlier.
On the longer-term supply side, the US will produce less oil in 2025 than previously expected as declining oil prices have prompted US producers to slow activity this year, the Energy Information Administration forecast on Tuesday in a monthly report.