Oil heads toward fifth weekly gain as market starts to tighten

Oil headed for its longest run of weekly gains in more than a year on an improving macroeconomic outlook and signs of a tighter market.

West Texas Intermediate traded near $80 a barrel Friday and has rallied about 4% this week for a fifth consecutive gain. In the US, economic growth exceeded expectations, and there’s speculation that the Federal Reserve is near or at the end of its tightening cycle. Chinese authorities, meanwhile, have pledged more stimulus to support growth in the largest crude importer.

Crude holdings at the key US storage hub in Cushing, Oklahoma, have declined by 7.5 million barrels during the past four weeks, pushing stockpiles to their lowest since May. That’s helping support a widening of WTI’s backwardation for its nearest two contracts, a bullish pricing pattern that has grown to its largest since November.

The rally in the US crude benchmark means that prices have all but erased the year’s losses after OPEC+ linchpins Saudi Arabia and Russia both curbed exports, with Moscow reaffirming its commitment to those obligations this week. That’s led banks, including Standard Chartered Plc and UBS Group AG, to forecast tightening global balances in the coming months.

“The outlook has not changed; sentiment remains buoyant,” said Tamas Varga, an analyst at brokerage PVM. He added that prices are likely to revisit their highs for the year in coming months.

Prices:
  • WTI for September delivery was little changed at $80.15 a barrel at 1:51 p.m. in London.
    • It’s up about 4% for the week.
  • Brent for September settlement was also little changed at $84.22 a barrel.

Russia reduced oil exports in July under commitments to OPEC+ and intends to do so again in August, Energy Minister Nikolai Shulginov said, according to a report from state-run news service Tass. In the the week to July 23, Russia’s seaborne flows from Baltic and Black Sea ports slumped to their lowest in seven months, according to vessel-tracking data monitored by Bloomberg.

© 2023 Bloomberg

Source: moneyweb.co.za