Despite a significant 6.86 million barrel draw in U.S. crude inventories reported by the EIA—well above analyst expectations for a 211,000-barrel decline—price action remains underwhelming. Both WTI and Brent remain on pace for a third straight monthly loss in October, each down over 3% as traders remain wary of a persistent oversupply narrative.
US-China Trade Agreement Lacks Conviction from Markets
A modest de-escalation in the U.S.-China trade dispute offered little lasting support. President Trump agreed to reduce tariffs on Chinese goods to 47% from 57% for one year following talks with President Xi Jinping. In return, China committed to resume U.S. soybean purchases, maintain rare earth exports, and enforce controls on fentanyl.
However, analysts caution that the agreement lacks structural changes. “This is more of a truce than a resolution,” said PVM’s Tamas Varga, noting that the softening of Brent prices contradicts bullish inventory fundamentals. The limited market reaction suggests traders are looking for more concrete shifts in trade policy before repricing demand forecasts.
Fed Rate Cut Offers Limited Support to Oil Bulls
The Federal Reserve’s quarter-point rate cut on Wednesday briefly boosted sentiment, reinforcing expectations of pro-growth monetary policy. Still, the Fed indicated that this might be its final cut of the year, citing the ongoing government shutdown as a risk to future data visibility.
Rystad Energy’s Claudio Galimberti said the rate decision marks a shift toward “gradual reflation,” which could benefit economically sensitive commodities like crude oil. Yet with fiscal and geopolitical uncertainties still in play, the reaction in oil markets remains muted.
OPEC+ Supply Decision Looms Large
All eyes are now on the upcoming OPEC+ meeting set for November 2. The group is widely expected to confirm an additional supply increase of 137,000 barrels per day for December. Traders are watching closely to assess whether this increment further weighs on market balance concerns or is absorbed by seasonal demand shifts.
 
									 
					