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Oil inches lower as investors weigh up OPEC+ supply cuts

Tuesday, 4 June 2024


LONDON, June 3 (Reuters): Oil prices edged lower on Monday as investors digested the complex deal brokered by producer group OPEC+ to extend various layers of output cuts, much of them into 2025.
Brent crude futures for August delivery were down 42 cents at $80.69 a barrel by 1318 GMT. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures for July delivery slipped 45 cents to $76.54.
Some analysts described the group's decision, agreed on Sunday, as incrementally bearish for oil prices.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies led by Russia, together known as OPEC+, are currently reducing output by a total of 5.86 million barrels per day (bpd), equating to about 5.7 per cent of global demand.
The group agreed to extend much of its cuts well into 2025 to support the market in the face of softer-than-expected demand growth, protracted high interest rates in key Western economies, worries over slow demand growth in top oil importer China and rising non-OPEC production.
The deal includes extending 3.66 million bpd of cuts that were due to expire this year until the end of 2025.
It also prolongs 2.2 million bpd of voluntary cuts that were to expire at the end of this month but will now be kept in place until the end of September before they are phased out gradually by September 2025.