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Oil prices settled 3% lower on Monday as OPEC+ plans for another increase to oil output in November and the resumption of oil exports by Iraq's Kurdistan region via Turkey raised the global supply outlook.
Brent crude futures closed at $67.97 per barrel on Monday, September 29, 2025, a decline of $2.16 or 3.1%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude settled at $63.45 per barrel, down $2.27 or 3.45%.
OPEC+, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied producers, meets on Sunday and is likely to confirm a production boost of at least 137,000 barrels per day for November to gain market share, said three sources.
OPEC+ has been pumping almost 500,000 bpd less than its targets.
“With OPEC+ pivoting toward market share, fundamentals look softer, and oversupply concerns prevail," Rystad Energy’s chief economist Claudio Galimberti said.
Crude oil flowed through a pipeline from the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region in northern Iraq to Turkey on Saturday for the first time in 2-1/2 years, Iraq's oil ministry said.
Crude oil flows from Kurdistan to Turkey's Ceyhan port are running at 150,000-160,000 bpd, two industry sources told Reuters.
The resumption is expected eventually to bring up to 230,000 bpd of crude back to international markets.
U.S. stocks ended higher on Monday, despite concerns that a potential government shutdown could add to the market's uncertainties.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 68.78 points or 0.2% to end at 46,316.07, according to the Dow Jones Market Data.
The S&P 500 went up 17.51 points or 0.3% to finish at 6,661.21.
The Nasdaq Composite advanced 107.09 points or 0.5% to close at 22,591.15.
All three major U.S. stock benchmarks secured back-to-back daily gains, after also rising on Friday.
Caturus Energy has announced a multiyear contract with Nabors Industries for the deployment of the onshore drilling rig PACE-X Ultra X33.
Caturus executes long laterals and deep, high-pressure wells in complex subsurface settings across the Eagle Ford and Austin Chalk.
The rig recently mobilized to a Caturus pad in Live Oak County.
The PACE-X Ultra Rig X33 is billed as the most powerful onshore drilling system in the United States. The natural gas-powered walking rig has a 1 million pound mast and setback, racking capacity to 35,000 feet, three 2,000 horsepower mud pumps rated to 10,000 psi, torque of 65,000 foot pounds, 6,000 kW power generation, and 5.875 inch drillpipe. Caturus executives say the rig is roughly 25 percent more capable than existing fleets, enabling up to 4 mile laterals and vertical depths beyond 14,000 feet in high pressure, high temperature plays such as super-deep South Texas and the Haynesville.
Super-deep wells in the far western Haynesville north of Houston can cost more than $2,700 per lateral foot and comparably, in the super-deep Utica in Pennsylvania, more than $1,800 per lateral foot to drill and complete.
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