Global energy markets traded mixed on June 10, with crude oil prices witnessing mild profit-booking after recent gains. Brent crude fell 0.13% to $92.29 per barrel, while WTI crude declined 0.21% to $88.94 per barrel. Despite the pullback, both benchmarks remain sharply higher on a year-to-date basis, with Brent up 51.6% and WTI up 54.8%.
Among other energy commodities, TTF European natural gas gained 1.09%, outperforming the broader energy complex, while UK natural gas dropped 3.2%. Gasoline, heating oil, and ethanol also traded lower, reflecting softer near-term demand expectations.
Meanwhile, coal prices slipped 0.69%, though they remain up nearly 40% YTD, while naphtha was largely flat. The mixed performance across energy commodities suggests investors are reassessing demand prospects after the recent surge in oil and fuel markets.