Oil prices fell on Tuesday on Tuesday ahead of a possible increase in OPEC crude supply, as an escalating trade dispute between the United States and China unleashed sharp selloffs in many global markets.
U.S. crude futures ended Tuesday's session down 78 cents, or 1.2 percent, at $65.07 a barrel, erasing all but a penny of Monday's 79-cents gain.
Brent crude futures fell 37 cents, or a half a percent, to $74.97 a barrel by 2:27 p.m. ET, after rallying nearly $2 a barrel in the previous session.
"WTI is more vulnerable to spillover from today's hard selloff in global equities than is Brent as the differential between the two benchmarks has stretched back to above $10 per barrel," Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Illinois, said in a note.
"Brent is being relatively supported this week by increasing concerns over lost Libyan supply in which as much as 400,000 barrels per day of output has been impacted by an attack on two key terminals," he wrote.