Crude oil futures started the day slightly improved Tuesday after falling for seven of the last 10 sessions. Prices remained below the $50 per barrel mark, an improvement on January 2016’s fall to below $30 per barrel, but well below the $100 per barrel seen 2014. Oil is regarded as a barometer of the global economy, and while stocks have traded up since the start of President Donald Trump‘s administration, the bump seen in stock prices in other sectors of the economy may not be showing up for the oil industry soon. Producers in the United States are partially responsible for the current oversupply in oil. Global supply increased by 260,000 barrels per day in February, to 96.52 million barrels per day, and U.S. production is the highest it has been in a year, at 9.1 million barrels per day, roughly the amount Saudi Arabia produced in February. The United States also has 528.4 million barrels in storage, seven percent more than it stored a year ago. The U.S. effort largely nullified a 2016 agreement by OPEC, Russia and 10 non-OPEC oil producing nations to limit production, which sent oil prices to about $55 per barrel but encouraged U.S. producers to pump more oil.