Oil extended its longest run of losses this year ahead of the release of Federal Reserve minutes that may provide further clues on the path forward for monetary tightening in the US.
(Bloomberg) — Oil extended its longest run of losses this year ahead of the release of Federal Reserve minutes that may provide further clues on the path forward for monetary tightening in the US.
West Texas Intermediate fell near $75 a barrel after declining for a fifth session on Tuesday. The prospect of more aggressive interest-rate hikes from the Fed to quell inflation have kept a lid on prices, despite increasing evidence of a robust recovery in China following the end of Covid Zero.
Read More: Goldman Says China Recovery Is ‘A-OK’ and Commodities to Rally
Oil’s lackluster start to the year has dented some early optimism that resurgent Chinese demand would buoy prices. Morgan Stanley on Wednesday became the latest bank to trim its forecasts, arguing that the market will be oversupplied in the first quarter, and in balance in the second quarter before moving into a smaller-than-expected deficit in the second half.
For now, concerns over a US slowdown and China’s rebound from virus curbs have trapped futures within a range of around $10 a barrel as the bearish and bullish narratives clash, with a renewed supply disruption in Kazakhstan on Wednesday failing to move the needle.
“Growth concerns dominate, with fears of an ongoing hawkish Fed to slow down US inflation,” said Giovanni Staunovo, a commodity analyst at UBS Group AG.
Read More:
- China’s Binge on Russian Oil Separating Winners From Losers
- Kazakhstan Applies to Start Sending Oil to Germany via Russia
- Fast Growing African Fuel Markets Spur Gas-Station Deal Making
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