Crude Prices Little Changed as the Dollar Rallies

Crude Prices Little Changed as the Dollar Rallies


November WTI crude oil (CLX25) on Tuesday closed up +0.04 (+0.06%), and November RBOB gasoline (RBX25) closed down -0.0077 (-0.40%).

Crude oil and gasoline prices on Tuesday settled mixed.  Crude prices rose on carryover support from Sunday when OPEC+ agreed to a smaller-than-expected increase in its crude production levels.  Gains in crude were limited on Tuesday due to a stronger dollar, as the dollar index (DXY00) rallied to a 1.5-week high.  Additionally, Saudi Arabia’s unexpected decision to maintain its crude prices steady, rather than raising them, signals weakness in energy demand —a bearish factor for oil prices.

Crude prices have found support after OPEC+ agreed on Sunday to a 137,000 bpd increase in its crude production target, starting next month, which is below market expectations of a potential 500,000 bpd boost to production.  OPEC+ is in the midst of returning the remainder of a 1.66 million bpd supply cut and is boosting output to reverse the 2-year-long production cut and restore a total of 2.2 million bpd of production.

A bearish factor for crude was Saudi Arabia’s state-owned Aramco’s decision to keep the price of its main oil grade for Asian customers for delivery next month unchanged, contrary to expectations of a 30-cent-a-barrel increase.  The lack of a price increase signals weakness in energy demand and is bearish for crude prices.

Reduced crude production in Russia is supportive for oil prices after Reuters reported that Russia’s Kirishi oil refinery, with a capacity of 160,000 bpd, has halted most of its production following a Ukrainian drone attack and fire at the refinery on Saturday.  Ukraine has targeted at least 15 Russian refineries over the past two months, exacerbating a fuel crunch in Russia and limiting Russia’s crude export capabilities.  Ukrainian drone and missile attacks on Russian refineries have curbed Russia’s total refined-product flows to 1.94 million bpd in the first fifteen days of September, the lowest monthly average in over 3.25 years.

A decrease in crude oil held worldwide on tankers is bullish for oil prices.  Vortexa reported Monday that crude oil stored on tankers that have been stationary for at least seven days fell by -7% w/w to 82.81 million bbl in the week ended October 3.


finance.yahoo.com
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