"Oil Prices Dip Despite Significant Drop in U.S. Crude Inventories"

Oil prices declined after the Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported a significant increase in fuel inventories, despite a 5.5 million barrel draw in crude oil for the week ending December 29, 2023. The report showed a large gasoline inventory build of 10.9 million barrels and a middle distillate inventory increase of 10.1 million barrels. These inventory builds overshadowed the crude draw and contributed to the downward pressure on oil prices. Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions and an outage at Libya’s largest oil field, Sharara, have caused some upward movement in prices, with Brent crude approaching $80 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate above $70 per barrel. Goldman Sachs predicted Brent crude would trade between $70 and $90 per barrel for the year, citing stable OPEC supply and geopolitical risks as major price factors.
- Very Large Product Builds Push Oil Lower Despite Crude Draw OilPrice.com
- Oil falls on massive US fuel inventory builds CNBC
- Latest Oil Market News and Analysis for Jan. 4 Bloomberg
- U.S. Crude Oil Stocks Fell 5.5 Million Barrels in Week Ended Dec. 29 The Wall Street Journal
- Crude inventory decreased by 5.5M barrels for week ended Dec. 29 - EIA (Commodity:CL1:COM) Seeking Alpha
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