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Crude oil prices surged over 1% on Tuesday, reaching their highest level in seven weeks as renewed optimism about a potential trade agreement between Washington and Beijing boosted expectations for stronger global economic growth and higher fuel demand.
By midday trading in New York, Brent crude futures had climbed 81 cents (1.2%) to $67.85 per barrel, while U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude gained 83 cents (1.3%) to reach $66.12 per barrel.
The rally pushed both major oil benchmarks into technically overbought territory for the first time since early April, with Brent poised for its strongest close since mid-April and WTI set for its best finish since early April.
The price surge came as high-level trade negotiations between American and Chinese officials entered their second day in London, with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick reporting "productive discussions" aimed at resolving export control disputes that have strained relations between the economic superpowers.
"Market sentiment has clearly shifted toward optimism about these trade talks," noted Harry Tchilinguirian, head of research at Onyx Capital Group. "Investors are positioning themselves for what could be a meaningful breakthrough that would support energy demand."
On the supply front, reports indicated Saudi Arabia's national oil company Aramco plans to ship approximately 47 million barrels of crude to China in July - representing a modest reduction of about one million barrels compared to June allocations.
Tchilinguirian suggested this development might signal that OPEC+'s planned production increases may not significantly expand global supplies as some market participants had feared.
The OPEC+ alliance - comprising members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries plus allies including Russia - recently confirmed plans to gradually increase output by an additional 411,000 barrels per day during July as part of its ongoing strategy to carefully restore production cuts implemented during pandemic-era demand collapses.
A recent industry survey revealed OPEC's May production increases remained restrained overall, with key members including Iraq continuing output below agreed levels while Saudi Arabia and UAE maintained disciplined approach toward their scheduled production hikes.
Geopolitical Factors Influencing Markets
Tensions surrounding Iran's nuclear program also captured market attention after Tehran announced plans to present counter-proposals regarding international negotiations about its atomic activities following what Iranian officials described as an "unacceptable" initial offer from Western powers led by the United States.
European Sanctions Impact
The European Union moved forward with new economic measures targeting Russia’s energy sector financial institutions defense industry marking eighteenth round sanctions imposed response Moscow’s military actions Ukraine These restrictions expected further constrain Russian petroleum exports global markets supporting price levels
Scheduled Inventory Reports
Industry analysts anticipate weekly US government data show modest build commercial crude stockpile when Energy Information Administration releases figures Wednesday Preliminary estimates suggest addition roughly thousand barrels storage facilities would mark first inventory increase three weeks contrast typical seasonal patterns which normally see larger builds this time year
Market participants await American Petroleum Institute private sector report due later today followed official EIA statistics tomorrow provide clearer picture current supply demand balance world largest oil consuming nation
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