OIL PRICE BOUNCES AFTER HOUSE VOTES THROUGH DEBT-CEILING BILL, INVENTORIES CAP GAINS

avatar
· Views 42




  • Oil price recovers marginally after the House of Representatives votes through the debt-ceiling extension bill on Wednesday evening. 
  • Gains are capped by higher-than-expected inventory levels from the API, suggesting ample supply. 
  • Several Fed officials signal a “pause” may be appropriate at June meeting, though peak rate may be higher.

Oil price trades flat in the upper $67s (Brent in the lower $72s) on Thursday after making a small recovery from just above $67 reached the day before when sellers dominated the market. The rebound came after the US debt-ceiling extension bill was successfully voted through the House of Representatives, late on Wednesday evening. Oil price gained further support after several US Federal Reserve (Fed) officials said they thought interest rates should be left as they are at the next Fed meeting. Those gains were capped, however, after data from the American Petroleum Institute (API) showed a larger-than-expected rise in Oil inventories, indicating ample supply.   

Oil news and market movers 

  • Oil recovers from the deep trough it fell into midweek after US Congressmen voted through the debt-ceiling extension deal, relieving investor fears that a rebel faction might derail the progress of legislation.
  • The drama now moves to the Senate where a final vote on the agreement is expected before the end of Friday. 
  • Uncertainty over whether the Fed will hike or hold at the June 14 meeting shifted towards holding on Wednesday after Fed’s Philip Jefferson said he thought a pause before more hikes later might allow the economy time to digest current tightening and avoid bank stress. 
  • Expectations of a pause will weigh on the US Dollar, which is bullish for Oil price. 
  • Jefferson’s view of ‘pausing’ in June was backed up by Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker. 
  • Cleveland Fed President, Loretta Mester, however, said she saw no “compelling” reason to pause, in an interview with the Financial Times on Wednesday. 
  • The CME FedWatch tool, which provides an insight into the market view of the probability of future rate hikes, has flipped from previously showing odds favoring a 0.25% hike in June to an over 60% chance the Fed will leave rates unchanged.   
  • Two of OPEC ’s largest members, Russia and Saudi Arabia, appear to be clashing over policy ahead of the next OPEC meeting on June 4. 
  • According to sources in Riyadh, the Saudis are unhappy with the way Russia is allegedly flaunting quota cuts agreed at the October meeting, a report on Oilprice.com says. 
  • Although there is no official data available on Russian production, shipping data appears to corroborate the allegation they may have increased their Oil exports despite the OPEC agreement to cut. 
  • Last week, representatives of the two countries gave conflicting messages about the likely trajectory of the up-and-coming OPEC meeting. 
  • Saudi Oil Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman seemed to imply OPEC might cut production quotas when he warned speculators (interpreted as short-sellers) to “watch out”, and expressed support for OPEC’s October decision to cut supply. 
  • On the other hand, Russia’s Energy Minister, Alexander Novak, played down the idea of production cuts, saying “I don't think that there will be any new steps, because just a month ago certain decisions were made regarding the voluntary reduction of oil production by some countries

Peringatan: Pendapat yang disampaikan sepenuhnya merupakan milik penulis dan tidak mencerminkan posisi resmi Followme. Followme tidak bertanggung jawab atas keakuratan, kelengkapan, atau keandalan informasi yang disediakan, serta tidak bertanggung jawab atas tindakan apa pun yang diambil berdasarkan konten ini, kecuali dinyatakan secara tertulis.

Suka artikel ini? Tunjukkan apresiasimu dengan memberi hadiah untuk penulis.
Balasan 0

Tinggalkan pesan Anda sekarang

  • tradingContest