Oil prices hold above US$46 ahead of US inventories report
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
[SINGAPORE] Oil prices held above US$46 a barrel in Asia Tuesday ahead of a report on US commercial crude inventories, a closely watched indicator of demand in the world's top consumer.
A decline in US drilling activity has supported prices recently, fuelling hopes a fall in production would help ease the global crude supply glut.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for November delivery see-sawed in between negative and positive territory and was up two cents at US$46.28 in late-morning trade. Brent crude for November advanced 13 cents to US$49.38 a barrel.
The US Department of Energy will release its weekly stockpiles report Wednesday, giving a better idea about demand in the world's biggest economy.
The report will probably show that inventories rose by two million barrels in the week to October 2, a Bloomberg News survey showed, indicating slowing demand.
Reports that producer Russia was willing to discuss the global supply glut situation that has been weighing on the market also supported prices.
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
Daniel Ang, an investment analyst with Phillip Futures in Singapore, said the return of Iranian oil after it complies with an agreement on curbing its nuclear programme, is likely to be part of any talks.
"Oil prices dropping to this level and staying here for a prolonged period of time is definitely hurting major oil producers, Russia included," Ang said in a market commentary.
Ang expects Iranian oil "to cause a one million barrel per day surplus of supply when Iran reaches maximum capacity and this would likely be the key topic of any meeting".
Crippling economic sanctions imposed by the west on Iran have restricted the country's oil exports, but its compliance to the terms of a landmark agreement reached in July could see the sanctions lifted.
Tehran has denied western allegations it was building a nuclear bomb, saying its nuclear programme was for peaceful purposes.
AFP
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
StarHub hands Ensign InfoSecurity control back to Temasek in S$115 million deal, books S$200 million gain
Singaporeans can now buy record amount of yen per Singdollar
Air India asks Tata, Singapore Airlines for funds after US$2.4 billion loss
Keppel DC Reit posts 13.2% higher Q1 DPU of S$0.02833 on strong portfolio performance