Oil extended a decline after an industry report pointed to a substantial build in US inventories, and wider markets struck a weaker tone ahead of the end of the quarter.
Brent fell toward $85 a barrel after a 0.6% drop on Tuesday, while West Texas Intermediate was below $81. The industry-funded American Petroleum Institute said nationwide stockpiles expanded 9.3 million barrels last week, according to people familiar with the data. The API also reported a 2.4 million barrel rise in crude at the Cushing, Oklahoma, hub, although gasoline stockpiles shrank.
If confirmed by government data due later Wednesday, levels of crude at Cushing would have posted the biggest weekly gain in barrel terms since January 2023. Meanwhile, gasoline inventories would have fallen for an eighth week, the longest run of declines in almost a year.
Oil has rallied this quarter after breaking out from a tight range that held for the year's first couple of months. Geopolitical uncertainty amid Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil infrastructure and extended supply cutbacks by OPEC+ have buoyed prices, although a challenging economic outlook in China and robust non-OPEC supply growth remain headwinds.
Brent for May settlement fell 0.9% to $85.48 a barrel at 12:00 p.m. in Singapore.
WTI for May delivery declined 0.8% to $80.98 a barrel.
Source : Bloomberg