Oil extended losses after President Donald Trump said Venezuela would turn over millions of barrels of crude to the US, which will be sold at market prices to benefit both countries.
West Texas Intermediate tumbled to trade around $56 after closing 2% lower on Tuesday. Brent settled below $61. Venezuela’s interim authorities will be giving up as many as 50 million barrels of “High Quality, Sanctioned Oil” to the US, the American president wrote in a social media post.
Trump said US Energy Secretary Chris Wright has been tasked with executing the plan “immediately.” The market continues to digest the fallout from the ouster of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro by American forces, and what that means for oil exports and the country’s energy industry.
The US measure “reduces the risk of Venezuela having to reduce output due to storage constraints, so reducing fears of supply disruptions,” said Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy at ING Groep NV in Singapore. “Overall, the fundamental outlook remains bearish, suggesting that there is further downside ahead for oil prices.”
Venezuela was once an oil-producing powerhouse, but the nation’s output has slumped over the past two decades and now represents 1% of global supplies. Still, continuing flows will add to an already oversupplied market, after OPEC+ and others increased supply against a backdrop of subdued demand growth.
Chevron Corp. is the only American major operating in Venezuela under special US permission, and the company continues to load crude. All of the oil goes to refineries in the US, including Valero Energy Corp., Phillips 66 and Marathon Petroleum Corp.
Trafigura Group and other traders will hold talks with the US about how they can return to buying Venezuelan oil as Trump is set to meet with energy executives at the White House within the next week. The president has said American companies will spend billions reviving the nation’s industry.
Meanwhile, the US and Ukraine’s allies converged toward an agreement on the security plan long sought by Kyiv during a meeting in Paris on Tuesday of the so-called coalition of the willing.
Any peace deal could pave the way for fewer curbs on Russian crude exports, adding to an already oversupplied market, though Moscow has largely kept its oil flowing to countries such as India and China since the war began.
Prices
-
WTI for February delivery dropped 1.4% at $56.31 a barrel at 8:50 a.m. in Singapore.
-
Brent for March settlement closed 1.7% lower at $60.70 a barrel on Tuesday.
. Read more on Markets by NDTV Profit.