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Oil Prices Hold Steady Amid Middle East Tensions

Oil prices held steady on Tuesday as a weaker demand outlook offset lingering concerns about possible supply disruptions in the Middle East.

Benchmark Brent crude traded virtually unchanged at $63.26 a barrel after rising over 1 percent in the previous session on fears of supply disruptions from the energy-rich Gulf. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were marginally higher at $56.27 per barrel.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) pledged to keep global markets adequately supplied in the event of a disruption.

The oil market is currently well supplied, with oil production exceeding demand in the first half of 2019, pushing up global stocks by 900,000 barrels per day, the IEA said in a statement.

Meanwhile, amid heightened tensions in the Persian Gulf, the head of Iran's navy, Rear Admiral Hossein Khanzadi, reportedly said today that Tehran is observing all U.S. ships in the Gulf region and keeps an archive of their movements.

"We observe all enemy ships, particularly [those of] America, point by point from their origin until the moment they enter the region," Khanzadi said.

Elsewhere, the United States has slapped sanctions on a Chinese company for importing Iranian crude in violation of U.S. restrictions on Iran's oil industry.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the sanctions are "part of our maximum pressure campaign" on Iran.

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Market Analysis

First quarter growth data from China gained the maximum focus this week as trends in the massive emerging economy impact its trading partners. Elsewhere, the IMF released its latest global macroeconomic projections. Read our story to find out why comments from the Fed Chair Powell damped rate cut expectations. Meanwhile, there was some survey data that kindled hopes of a recovery in manufacturing. In the U.K., inflation data for March revealed some confusing trends.

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