Nov 27 (Reuters) – Oil prices inched down on Thursday on expectations of a Ukraine‑Russia ceasefire which could pave the way for the unwinding of Western sanctions against Russian supply, though trading was set to remain thin due to the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.
Brent crude futures shed 12 cents or 0.2% to stand at $63.01 a barrel as of 0722 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures slipped 5 cents or 0.1% to $58.6 a barrel.
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Both contracts settled about 1% higher on Wednesday as investors assessed oversupply risk and the prospect of a Russia-Ukraine peace deal.
U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff is set to travel to Moscow next week with other senior U.S. officials for talks with Russian leaders on a possible plan to end the nearly four-year-old war in Ukraine, the deadliest in Europe since World War Two.
“Oil is inching lower this morning largely on hopes of a Ukraine peace breakthrough and a broader unwinding of the war-premium, but the market still feels thin and directionless ahead of the OPEC+ meeting and the U.S. Thanksgiving lull,” said Phillip Nova’s senior market analyst Priyanka Sachdeva.
“The real story is that prices remain extremely vulnerable and any serious progress on peace talks would unleash more freely flowing Russian barrels into an already-oversupplied market, keeping crude skewed to medium-term downside with only short-lived spikes,” Sachdeva said.
“We are now approaching the year-end with thinner liquidity without any new drivers unless the Fed surprises the markets with a hawkish guidance on the 10 December FOMC meeting, said OANDA senior market analyst Kelvin Wong.
“WTI crude is likely to be range-bound between US$56.80 and US$60.40 till year-end,” he added.
Reporting by Yuka Obayashi and Trixie Yap; Editing by Christopher Cushing
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