By Erwin Seba
HOUSTON (Reuters) -Oil prices were held in check on Thursday by threatened U.S. tariffs on Canadian and Mexican crude that could take effect this weekeend.
Brent crude futures were up 27 cents at $76.85 a barrel at 11:05 a.m. CST (1705 GMT). U.S. crude futures were up 13 cents to $72.75. U.S. crude futures had settled at their lowest price this year on Wednesday.
“We’re getting close to the deadline and people are getting nervous,” said Phil Flynn, senion analyst with Price Futures Group.
U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to impose a 25% tariff as early as Saturday on Canadian and Mexican exports to the United States if those two countries do not end shipments of fenatanyl across U.S. borders.
The White House on Tuesday reaffirmed Trump’s plan to impose 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico. On Wednesday, the president’s nominee to run the Commerce Department said the two countries can avoid this if they act swiftly to close their borders to fentanyl.
However, IG market analyst Tony Sycamore said traders had already priced in Trump’s tariffs: “(this is) a major reason why crude oil is trading where it is.”
Winter storms hit U.S. demand last week, with crude oil stockpiles in the U.S. rising by 3.5 million barrels as refiners cut production. Analysts had expected a 3.2 million-barrel rise, according to a Reuters poll.
On the supply side, the latest U.S. sanctions on Moscow are squeezing crude oil exports from Russia’s western ports, which are set to fall 8% in February from the January plan as Moscow boosts refining, traders said and Reuters calculations showed.
Investors are also looking ahead to a meeting by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies including Russia, together called OPEC+, scheduled for Feb. 3.
The group is set to discuss Trump’s efforts to raise U.S. oil production and take a joint stance on the matter, Kazakhstan said on Wednesday.
Trump has called on OPEC and its leading member, Saudi Arabia, to lower oil prices, saying doing so would end the conflict in Ukraine. He has also set up an agenda of maximizing U.S. oil and gas production, already the world’s largest.
However, analysts believe a price war between the U.S. and OPEC+ is unlikely as it may hurt both.
“A price war with the U.S. would involve OPEC+ producers maximising their output to undercut prices and drive shale production into decline,” analysts at BMI, a Fitch Group division, said in a note.
(Reporting by Erwin Seba in Houston, Paul Carsten, Arathy Somasekhar and Katya Golubkova. Editing by Kim Coghill, Mark Potter and david Evans)