Oil rises on weaker dollar — but weaker demand is likely

London — Oil rose on Thursday, encouraged by a weaker dollar and evidence of strong US fuel demand, though demand prospects remain clouded by the turmoil engulfing emerging markets and an escalation in the US trade dispute with China.

Emerging-market stocks, bonds and currencies have plunged in recent weeks in response to financial crises in the likes of Turkey, SA and Venezuela.

The dollar eased by about 0.1% against a basket of major currencies on Thursday. But it has gained 3.3% this year and has benefited from the flight out of emerging-market assets. As a result, major oil consumers are finding their import bills rising quickly.

Brent crude futures were up 39c at $77.66 a barrel by 9.42am GMT, still short of Tuesday’s high near $80. US futures were up 12c at $68.85.

“In the last week we’ve seen the focus shift again from supply back to demand and the continued calamity in emerging-market stocks, bonds and currencies is weighing on the medium-and longer-term demand outlook,” said Saxo Bank senior manager Ole Hansen.

“We did see quite a lot of momentum last week and then oil was shot down in flames after its failed attempt to break above $80 … now we have the extra dimension of a spike in oil prices that can only increase the pain [for consumers] and the risk of a slowdown in demand.”

The market is already preparing for the loss of at least 1-million barrels per day (bpd) in Iranian crude supplies from early November, when US sanctions against Tehran come into force. The oil price has risen by 3% since the US government announced the sanctions in May.

“The prospects of increased supplies from oil cartel Opec and her allies, and weaker demand from China and other emerging markets, could weigh further on oil prices going forward, or at least limit the upside potential,” said Fawad Razaqzada, analyst at futures brokerage Forex. “This is because of the dollar’s strength, weighing heavily on emerging-market currencies, including the yuan, which in turn has pushed up the costs of all dollar-denominated commodities.”

US crude stockpiles fell last week as strong consumption prompted refineries to boost output, data from the American Petroleum Institute (API) showed on Wednesday. Opec, also on Wednesday, said it expected global oil demand to break through 100-million bpd for the first time this year.

A further risk is seen in Opec-member Venezuela, where a government and political crisis has halved oil production in the past two years to little more than 1-million bpd.

David Maher, MD for energy at commodity trading house RCMA Group, said Venezuela’s “declines will continue” as a “lack of cash and infrastructural collapse [are] not easy to fix”.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za