Oil Edges Higher After Four-Day Retreat as Traders Look to China

Bloomberg · 08 Dec 2022 3.1K Views

(Bloomberg) -- Oil rose after a four-day drop as investors weighed the impact of China’s moves to ease virus curbs against a looming US slowdown.

West Texas Intermediate climbed toward $73 a barrel after plunging more than 11% over the previous four sessions as a raft of US banks sounded the alarm on a possible recession. Among the latest, Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Jane Fraser flagged countries including the US rolling into recessionary environments. Those concerns have largely eclipsed positive signals from China, which is rolling back Covid-19 curbs in a boost for energy consumption.

Crude has weakened this month, shedding all of the year’s gains, as central banks tighten monetary policy and the macroeconomic outlook sours. Fresh curbs on crude from Russia meant to punish Moscow for the war in Ukraine have so far not disrupted trade substantially, although there is a growing blockage of oil tankers in waters off Turkey. In addition, market liquidity has been thinning out as the year-end approaches.

“Risks on the demand outlook remain a key overhang for oil prices, and the uncertainty on how far economic conditions may moderate could keep some investors shunning” the market, said Yeap Jun Rong, market strategist for IG Asia Pte. There’s been “some unwinding of previous bullish bets.”

Adding to the downbeat mood, the US Energy Information Administration reported on Wednesday that distillate and gasoline inventories expanded last week, indicating weaker demand in the world’s largest economy. Still, the snapshot also showed another draw in nationwide crude inventories.

Key time spreads are indicating ample near-term supply. WTI’s prompt spread — the difference between the two nearest contracts — is slipping further into a bearish contango structure. The gap was 27 cents a barrel in contango compared with 91 cents in the opposite backwardated structure a month ago.

The Biden Administration, meanwhile, is still weighing the impact of China’s reopening and the price cap on Russian supplies before moving to start replenishing depleted strategic petroleum reserves, according to Amos Hochstein, the State Department’s senior energy security adviser.


Editor: Callie
Proofreading:AUREL

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