Global crude oil prices logged their first weekly gain after almost one month in the previous session after Hurricane Francine caused production halts in the US Gulf of Mexico. Oil snapped the bearish sell-off tone buoyed by weather-related hurricane warnings after benchmark Brent crude futures crashed to a 33-month low over demand and oversupply concerns earlier this week.
Brent settled lower on Friday, September 13, after US Gulf of Mexico crude production resumed following Hurricane Francine and a weekly rise in US rig count. Brent crude futures settled at $71.61 a barrel, down 36 cents or 0.5 per cent. US West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) settled at $68.65 a barrel, down 32 cents, or 0.5 per cent. Back home, crude oil futures settled 0.46 per cent lower at ₹5,782 per barrel on the multi-commodity exchange (MCX).
-As US Gulf Coast production and refining activity resumes, investors have opted to offload oil contracts until the weekend. For the week, oil futures finished higher following sharp storm-related increases early in the week, breaking a streak of declines. Brent logged an increase of about 0.8 per cent since the close of last Friday's session, while WTI registered a roughly 1.4 per cent gain.
-Brent crude rose above $72 a barrel, advancing for a third session. Much of crude’s recovery rally has been driven by covering of extreme bearish positioning after prices dipped below $70 earlier in the week. Hurricane Francine weakened from its previous hurricane force and spurred a sizable production shut-in in the Gulf of Mexico.
-In broader markets, equities rallied as the US dollar declined, boosting commodities, including crude, while Libyan oil flows continued to slump. The crude oil price remains 16 per cent lower this quarter due to concerns about a dimming demand outlook. The global consumption growth in the first half was the lowest since the pandemic as China’s economy cooled.
-Official data showed that, as of Thursday, the storm had nearly shut in 42 per cent of the region's oil production, accounting for about 15 per cent of US output. The cuts are expected to prove brief and, within the broader context, are unlikely to spur much movement in the crude balances given the importance of shale production, which accounts for the major portion of US output.
-Crude prices also took a hit from the US rig count from energy services group Baker Hughes, opening a new tab, which reported the biggest weekly rise in oil and natural gas rigs in a year. The oil and gas rig count rose by eight in the week to September 13 to 590, returning to mid-June levels. The increase was the biggest since the week of September 15, 2023. Crude oil rigs rose by five to 488 this week, while gas rigs rose by three to 97.
-The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and the International Energy Agency (IEA) lowered their demand growth forecasts, citing economic struggles in China, the world's largest oil importer. Oil stockpiles also rose across the board last week as crude imports grew and exports dipped, while fuel demand weakened, said the Energy Information Administration (EIA).
-Investors look forward to next week's two-day US Federal Reserve policy meeting. The US Fed is widely expected to cut interest rates on Wednesday. Lower interest rates or borrowing costs can boost economic growth and the overall oil demand. Traders are betting on a 25- or 50-basis point interest rate cut in September.
According to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, energy producers have shut in 730,000 barrels per day—approximately 42 per cent of the Gulf of Mexico's oil output and nearly 992 million cubic feet of natural gas from Gulf waters.
The IEA has lowered its demand growth forecasts for 2024 and 2025. The IEA projects global demand to increase by 900,000 bpd this year and around 950,000 bpd next year, a sharp decline from the 2.1 million bpd growth in 2023.
According to Kaynat Chainwala, AVP-Commodity Research, Kotak Securities, IEA's projections are largely due to China's rapid slowdown in demand growth consumption. ‘’Despite this, oil prices have continued to climb, supported by increased risk appetite amid growing expectations of US Federal Reserve rate cuts,'' said Chainwala.
According to Pranav Mer, Vice President, EBG - Commodity & Currency Research, JM Financial Services Ltd, "Crude oil prices have seen a strong recovery in the past couple of sessions, supported short-covering ahead of futures expiry next week, with additional support from temporary supply outages at the Gulf of Mexico due to storm Francine.''
However, Mer added that the upside looks limited amid weak global oil demand. On the chart...crude oil prices hold resistance at 5,910/ 6,000, while support holds at 5,690/ 5,520 on the downside, as per the analyst.
‘’Crude prices also rose following the ECB's decision to cut interest rates during its monetary policy meeting, which increased expectations of similar cuts by the US Fed. The global equity markets rebounded after the ECB’s move, while the US dollar index and 10-year bond yields dropped, providing additional support to global energy prices. We expect crude oil prices to remain volatile. Support levels are $68.10-67.60, with resistance at $69.20-69.80. In INR terms, oil has support at ₹5,750-5,690 and resistance at ₹5,880-5,940,'' said Rahul Kalantri, VP Commodities, Mehta Equities Ltd.
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