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Oil prices fall as OPEC+ plans further increases in output

The oil prices dropped on Tuesday, as OPEC+ increased production and resumed exports of Iraqi Kurdistan via Turkey. This reinforced the view that a supply surplus is imminent.

Brent crude futures expiring Tuesday fell by 47 cents or 0.69% to $67.50 per barrel at 0012 GMT. The contract for December, which is the most active, was down 43 cents or 0.64% at $66.66 a barrel.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was trading at $63.05 per barrel, down by 40 cents or 0.63%.

These drops are a continuation of Monday's decline when Brent and WTI both settled over 3% lower, after recording their steepest daily losses since August 1, 2025.

In a note sent to clients, IG analyst Tony Sycamore noted that oil's fall came after Iraq's Kurdistan Region resumed crude exports on the weekend. He also wrote that reports indicate OPEC+ will likely approve an increase in November production at its meeting this coming weekend.

Three sources with knowledge of the discussions said that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) and its allies, including Russia, are likely to approve a further increase in oil production of at least 137,000 barallons per day during a Sunday meeting.

Ed Meir, Marex analyst, said that "even though (OPEC+) is under their quota in any case, the market does not like the fact more oil is coming into the country."

Iraq's oil minister said that crude oil began flowing through the pipeline on Saturday for the first time since 2-1/2 years after a deal was reached to break a deadlock.

In recent weeks the market has been cautious, as it balances supply risks, which are mainly caused by drone attacks from Ukraine on Russian refineries with concerns about oversupply and low demand.

Hamas, meanwhile, remained unsure about its position. (Reporting by Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

(source: Reuters)