RE: Alaska Weather22 Oct 2025 22:58
Oil flying
Oil prices jumped ~3.5% in afternoon trading, extending gains to the highest levels in nearly three weeks as traders reacted to reports that Washington is weighing new sanctions on Russian energy exports and to a surprise draw in U.S. crude inventories.
Live market data show Brent crude trading around $63.40 a barrel, up 3.39%, as of Wednesday at 4:39 p.m. ET, and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) trading at $59.30, up roughly 3.60%. The late-session rally accelerated after reports that the U.S. administration is considering expanded restrictions on Russian crude and refined-product shipments, potentially tightening global supplies just as winter demand picks up.
According to Reuters, prices were already supported earlier in the day by news that the U.S. Energy Department plans to purchase one million barrels for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and by unexpected draws in gasoline and distillate stocks, suggesting stronger-than-forecast domestic consumption. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) also showed overall U.S. crude inventories falling more than analysts anticipated.