Oil prices drifted lower on Monday after OPEC+ said it will go ahead with a modest production increase in July. Brent crude fell to about $74 a barrel as traders weighed the added supply against signs that global demand may be cooling.
The move from the alliance eased immediate concerns about tighter markets, but it also reinforced expectations that the oil market is entering a more balanced phase. Analysts have pointed to softer demand signals in some major economies, which have helped limit further gains in crude.
OPEC+ has been gradually restoring output in recent months, a strategy aimed at avoiding sharp price swings while keeping the market stable. Monday’s reaction suggested investors viewed the latest increase as manageable, rather than a shock to supply.
For consumers and businesses, the next focus will be whether weaker demand continues to offset OPEC+'s added barrels. If economic data softens further, oil prices could remain under pressure even as producers keep raising output slowly.
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