Oil Holds Decline After Fed Rate Cut, Rising US Fuel Stockpiles

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US data on Wednesday showed crude inventories fell 9.29 million barrels, their biggest drop in three months, amid a sizable increase in exports.(Image: Bloomberg)
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  • Brent crude traded around $68 a barrel after a 0.8% drop on Wednesday
  • West Texas Intermediate was near $64 per barrel following recent declines
  • US crude inventories fell 9.29 million barrels, the largest drop in three months
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Oil held a decline as traders weighed a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut and an increase in US fuel inventories. 

Brent traded around $68 a barrel, after losing 0.8% on Wednesday, while West Texas Intermediate was near $64. While lower interest rates typically boost energy demand, traders had mostly priced in the 25 basis-point cut ahead of the Fed's decision and unwound hedges against a larger move.

Wednesday's drop brought oil back to the mid-point of the $5 range it has been trading in since early August. Prices have been buffeted by geopolitical risks, including increased attacks by Ukraine on Russian energy infrastructure, the accelerated return of OPEC+ supply that has boosted predictions of a looming glut later in the year, and the economic impacts of US President Donald Trump's tariffs. 

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US data on Wednesday showed crude inventories fell 9.29 million barrels, their biggest drop in three months, amid a sizable increase in exports. However, the adjustment factor ballooned and distillate inventories rose to the highest since January, adding a bearish tilt to the report. 

Prices:

  • Brent for November settlement slipped 0.2% to $67.83 a barrel at 8:52 a.m. in Singapore.

  • WTI for October delivery declined 0.2% to $63.92 a barrel.

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