BENGALURU, Jan 25 (Reuters) – Oil prices settled largely unchanged on Wednesday after government data showed a smaller-than-anticipated build in US crude inventories, countering weak economic data from Tuesday.
Brent crude futures settled at USD 86.12 a barrel, down a cent, while the US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures settled at USD 80.15 a barrel, up by 2 cents.
The Brent benchmark had dropped 2.3% and WTI futures slipped 1.8% in Tuesday’s session after data showed US business activity contracted in January for the seventh straight month, raising concerns about an economic slowdown.
“End of the day here, the market is starting to get a little more anxious about the economy and things along those lines,” Mizuho analyst Robert Yawger said. “Main worry at this point is demand destruction due to an economic slowdown.”
WTI prices briefly rose by over USD 1 per barrel on Wednesday after the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said that US crude inventories rose by 533,000 barrels in the last week to 448.5 million barrels. Analysts polled by Reuters were expecting a 1-million-barrel rise.
“The market is taking the report as somewhat supportive,” said Phil Flynn, analyst at Price Futures Group.
“If we look at crude, the increase in stocks was much smaller than anticipated, and that is raising concerns about tightness in supply. There is no backup supply, like we normally do, as the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is heavily drawn.”
Crude prices have rallied in 2023, with global benchmark Brent crude topping USD 89 a barrel this week for the first time since early December on the ending of China’s COVID-19 controls and hopes that rises in US interest rates will soon taper off.
Elsewhere on the supply side, volume should remain steady as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies, a group known as OPEC+, are likely to endorse the group’s current output levels at a Feb. 1 meeting, OPEC+ sources said on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Shariq Khan; Additional reporting by Alex Lawler, Yuka Obayashi and Muyu Xu; Editing by David Gregorio and Lisa Shumaker)
This article originally appeared on reuters.com