Oil steadies ahead OPEC meeting

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Brent crude oil futures hovered around $67.1 per barrel on Wednesday as investors tread cautiously ahead of OPEC+’s upcoming output decision.


The group is set to raise production by 411,000 barrels per day (bpd) in August, bringing 2025’s total increase to 1.78 million bpd—equivalent to over 1.5% of global demand. This planned output hike is widely viewed as both a penalty for member countries that have exceeded their quotas and a strategic move by Saudi Arabia to regain market share amid rising competition from US shale producers and other non-OPEC suppliers.


Meanwhile, an industry report showed an unexpected rise in US crude inventories, with American Petroleum Institute (API) data revealing a 0.68 million-barrel increase last week. This ended a four-week streak of inventory declines and ran counter to analysts’ expectations of a 2.26 million-barrel drop.


The inventory build adds to near-term uncertainty about the strength of US demand and the pace of domestic production, factors closely monitored by the market for signs of shifting supply-demand dynamics.


Geopolitical tensions have also eased somewhat as the Israel-Iran ceasefire holds, reducing oil’s risk premium and alleviating some supply disruption concerns. However, the global outlook remains clouded by uncertainty over potential new US tariffs set to take effect after the July 9 deadline, with trade conflicts continuing to pressure economic growth prospects and, by extension, oil demand.


Against this backdrop, traders are balancing these mixed signals while awaiting clearer guidance from OPEC+ and upcoming economic data. The combination of moderate supply increases, inventory fluctuations, geopolitical developments, and trade policy risks is contributing to Brent crude’s cautious trading pattern, with prices consolidating as the market digests these competing factors ahead of the critical production meeting.