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Abstract:Oil headed for a substantial weekly loss, hurt by the Federal Reserve’s move toward tapering asset purchases, a rally in the U.S. dollar and concerns about global energy demand.
Oil headed for a substantial weekly loss, hurt by the Federal Reserves move toward tapering asset purchases, a rally in the U.S. dollar and concerns about global energy demand.
West Texas Intermediate has shed more than 6% this week, and closed at the lowest since May on Thursday amid a broad retreat across commodities. Most-active prices for the U.S. benchmark climbed 0.5% to around $64 a barrel in early trading on Friday.
Oil has been buffeted this month by the prospect of the Fed cutting back on its extraordinary monetary stimulus despite the spread of the delta coronavirus variant. The pandemic remains a threat to energy demand, especially across Asia, with key importer China restricting mobility to combat an outbreak.
Crudes sudden bout of weakness, which follows a powerful rally in the first half, may prompt OPEC+ to pause its next planned production increase, according to Citigroup Inc. The 23-nation group led by Saudi Arabia and Russia is scheduled to meet to assess the state of the market on Sept. 1. At present, members are due to add another 400,000 barrels a day of supply next month.
The dollar hit the highest level since November following the Fed‘s move. That makes commodities including crude more expensive for overseas buyers. Oil’s drop was matched by retreats in copper and other raw materials.
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Middle East situation-Blinken said Netanyahu has accepted the latest ceasefire agreement. Hamas responded: "No agreement will be reached unless Hamas' conditions are met and the content of previous UN resolutions is complied with." An end to the war will be bad for crude oil and gold.
Demand expectations strengthen, driving up oil prices. Shale oil production activities slow down, leading to increased divergence between the International Energy Agency and OPEC.
Oil prices drifted lower on Friday, wiping out gains from the previous session, as the dollar continued to rise on bets the U.S. central bank will bring forward plans to raise rates to tame inflation.
Oil gained at the start of the week’s trading on signs that the crude market is tightening because of the global energy crunch.