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BRENT CRUDE $91.87 -7.52 (-7.57%) WTI CRUDE $84.00 -7.17 (-7.86%) NAT GAS $2.68 +0.03 (+1.13%) GASOLINE $2.95 -0.15 (-4.85%) HEAT OIL $3.34 -0.3 (-8.23%) MICRO WTI $83.99 -7.18 (-7.88%) TTF GAS $38.98 -3.45 (-8.13%) E-MINI CRUDE $83.93 -7.25 (-7.95%) PALLADIUM $1,572.00 -9.3 (-0.59%) PLATINUM $2,114.40 +2.2 (+0.1%) BRENT CRUDE $91.87 -7.52 (-7.57%) WTI CRUDE $84.00 -7.17 (-7.86%) NAT GAS $2.68 +0.03 (+1.13%) GASOLINE $2.95 -0.15 (-4.85%) HEAT OIL $3.34 -0.3 (-8.23%) MICRO WTI $83.99 -7.18 (-7.88%) TTF GAS $38.98 -3.45 (-8.13%) E-MINI CRUDE $83.93 -7.25 (-7.95%) PALLADIUM $1,572.00 -9.3 (-0.59%) PLATINUM $2,114.40 +2.2 (+0.1%)
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Oil Prices Slip as Traders Look Past Kazakhstan Disruption


Oil prices fell in early Asian trading on Wednesday, with traders shifting focus away from what will likely be a short-lived supply disruption in Kazakhstan and back toward the prospect of rising U.S. inventories and renewed macro uncertainty tied to trade threats.

At the time of writing, Brent was down $0.79 or 1.22% at $64.13 per barrel, while WTI had fallen $0.64 or -1.06% to $59.72.

The decline comes a day after crude posted strong gains, buoyed by news that OPEC+ producer Kazakhstan halted output at the Tengiz and Korolev oilfields due to power distribution issues and after strong Chinese economic data boosted demand expectations.

The market initially treated the Kazakhstan outage as a bullish catalyst, as Tengiz is one of the world’s largest oil fields, but it soon became clear that the interruption would be temporary, limiting its ability to underpin prices for long.

Reuters reported that output at the two fields could remain shut for another seven to 10 days, according to industry sources. The shutdown follows fires that damaged power infrastructure serving the Chevron-operated Tengiz site and the adjacent Korolev field.

The more immediate bearish driver in Wednesday’s trade is the expectation of a build in U.S. crude stockpiles, a familiar price headwind when demand signals are not strong enough to absorb additional barrels. API data is due out later on Wednesday, and the EIA report follows on Thursday.

While a combination of geopolitical risk and supply outages has provided temporary support to prices in recent weeks, it’s hard to see past the fundamentals of a market that is set to be oversupplied in 2026. The continuation of tariff threats from Trump only adds to the economic uncertainty going forward, with any additional trade friction likely to lead to weaker demand growth globally.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

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