Oil prices closed higher on Wednesday following confirmation that the United States seized an oil tanker near Venezuela, a development that immediately stirred concerns about short-term global supply.
Market analysts say the incident injected fresh uncertainty into an already tense environment marked by disruptions involving Venezuelan, Iranian and Russian barrels.
Brent crude settled at 62.21 dollars per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate closed at 58.46 dollars, with both benchmarks rising by about 0.4 percent. Traders noted that prices briefly climbed by nearly one percent after settlement as the news filtered through the market.
The News Chronicle understands that U.S. officials confirmed the operation but withheld the vessel’s name and specific location where the Coast Guard-led seizure occurred. Industry observers believe further actions of this kind could trigger sharper market reactions if they point to a broader enforcement push.
According to analysts, the tanker seizure only deepens existing anxieties. Commodity Context founder Rory Johnston said the market was already sensitive to disruptions in the flow of crude from sanctioned or high-risk regions. Earlier in the day, a Ukrainian official revealed that sea drones had disabled a tanker linked to Russian oil trade—the third such incident in two weeks.
Another key development came from Washington, where a divided U.S. Federal Reserve cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point. While the move may support global oil demand by stimulating economic activity, Fed Chair Jerome Powell avoided giving any signal about another cut soon.
Prices had slipped earlier in the session after U.S. government data showed a smaller-than-expected drawdown of crude inventories, with stockpiles falling by 1.8 million barrels instead of the projected 2.3 million.

