Oil trimmed earlier gains as Saudi Arabia slashed its crude prices, signaling tepid demand, and risk-off sentiment clipped broader markets.
(Bloomberg) — Oil trimmed earlier gains as Saudi Arabia slashed its crude prices, signaling tepid demand, and risk-off sentiment clipped broader markets.
West Texas Intermediate traded near $73 a barrel, trading in over a $2 range. State-controlled Saudi Aramco cut crude prices to its main market Asia and Europe, a signal that demand remains sluggish as coronavirus cases in China surge. Crude also was restrained as equities fell and the dollar strengthened after a strong US labor report fuelled speculation that interest rates have more room to rise.Â
Why China’s Reopening Isn’t Boosting Global Oil Markets Yet
Crude inventory figures later Thursday will give a first insight into the impact of pre-Christmas cold weather on US stockpiles, after the American Petroleum Institute reported a build on Wednesday.Â
Crude is off to a gloomy start to the year with futures curves continuing to signal a market that is oversupplied. Â At the same time, the oil market is also grappling with lower levels of participation. Open interest remains near multiyear lows, leaving prices susceptible to large intraday swings.
The industry-funded API reported US commercial crude stockpiles expanded by 3.3 million barrels last week, according to people familiar with the figures. Gasoline inventories also increased, but supplies of distillates — a category that includes diesel — shrank.
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