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Oil settles higher as tight fuel markets offset crude supply concerns

By NST in November 11, 2025 – Reading time 3 minute
Oil settles higher as tight fuel markets offset crude supply concerns


NEW YORK: Oil prices settled higher on Monday as analysts focused on potential fuel supply disruptions from fresh US sanctions and Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian refineries, although predictions of a crude supply surplus kept gains in check.

Brent crude futures rose 43 cents, or 0.70 per cent, to settle at US$64.06 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures advanced 38 cents, or 0.60 per cent, to close at US$60.13 a barrel.

Fuel futures led gains in the oil complex as US gasoline futures closed over one per cent higher and diesel futures rose close to one per cent. A string of refinery issues in the US and drone strikes on Russian refineries have helped lift fuel prices, analysts said.

“Refinery issues in the Great Lakes and West Coast have kept prices elevated,” GasBuddy analyst Patrick De Haan wrote in a blog post. He added that thousands of US flight cancellations due to the federal government shutdown could also create more gasoline demand ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday.

Airlines cancelled more than 2,800 US flights and delayed more than 10,200 on Sunday — the worst day for disruptions since the start of the shutdown.

RUSSIAN SUPPLY CONCERNS

In Russia, oil major Lukoil’s Volgograd refinery halted operations last Thursday after it was struck by Ukrainian drones, three sources familiar with the matter said. On Monday, Russian forces destroyed four drone boats near the country’s Black Sea port of Tuapse, a local task force said.

Lukoil also declared force majeure at Iraq’s giant West Qurna-2 oilfield, four sources with knowledge of the matter said on Monday, after Western sanctions on the Russian oil major hampered its operations.

Lukoil’s operations faced mounting disruptions as a US deadline for companies to cut off business with the Russian company looms on Nov 21 and after an agreement to sell the operations to Swiss trader Gunvor collapsed.

FUEL LEADS, OIL LAGS

The oil market is split between rising volumes of crude stored at sea weighing on oil prices and limited availability of Russian refined products sustaining fuel prices, PVM analyst Tamas Varga said.

The volume of oil stored aboard ships in Asian waters has doubled in recent weeks after tightening Western sanctions curtailed imports into and India, and onshore inventories were also on the rise in the US.

Both crude oil benchmarks fell about two per cent last week — their second consecutive weekly decline — on expectations that crude supply will exceed demand in the months ahead due to higher OPEC+ production and record US output.

This month, OPEC+, or the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied producers, agreed to increase output slightly in December. While the group also paused further hikes in the first quarter, that may not limit supplies enough to support prices.

“Even with the prospect of reduced Russian supply and the first-quarter 2026 freeze on OPEC+ production quotas, the global crude oil market may run a smaller supply-demand surplus rather than a more supportive deficit,” said Evans.

RISK APPETITE RETURNS

Oil prices were also supported by investors’ increasing willingness to hold so-called risk assets as signs emerged of progress towards ending the US government shutdown.

The US Senate moved forward on Sunday on a measure aimed at reopening the federal government and ending the shutdown that has sidelined federal workers, delayed food aid and snarled air travel.

US lawmakers’ first step towards ending the shutdown boosted investors’ risk appetite, Varga said.

© New Straits Times Press (M) Bhd



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