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Oil Foreruns OPEC Talks, Pushing Brent up to Near $40

Published 06/02/2020, 02:16 PM
Updated 06/02/2020, 03:20 PM
© Reuters.

By Barani Krishnan 

Investing.com - From a market that seemed bottomless a little more than a month back, oil seems unable to stop its ascent now, with global crude benchmark Brent nearing $40 a barrel Tuesday on what many thought was a foregone conclusion: OPEC will deepen cuts when it meets this week.

“The oil market seems to be following the stock market optimism that for now has been unbreakable despite a looming China risk and rising social unrest in the U.S.,” Ed Moya, analyst at New York’s OANDA said. The Dow and S&P 500 hit three-month peaks.  

“The global economic recovery has done wonders for an improving crude demand outlook but sooner than later, escalating trade tensions, curfews across the nation, and permanent labor destruction will dampen the outlook.”

New York-traded WTI settled up $1.27, or 3.5%, at $37.06 per barrel.

Brent, the London-traded global benchmark for oil, settled up $1.25, or 3.3%, at $39.57.

Both WTI and Brent are still down 40% on the year, with the Covid-19 leaving demand for fuel way off from where it stood at the start of 2020. Yet, oil prices look frothy after five weeks of non-stop gains, with Brent gaining nearly 100% in May. 

WTI, on the other hand, is up 270% from an end-April low of just above $10. It even hit sub-zero levels of -$37 in mid-April.

“A continuation of the oil-price rally in [the second quarter] may prove self-defeating,” Giovanni Staunovo, commodity analyst at UBS Wealth Management, said in a note.

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Tuesday’s rally came as OPEC and key ally Russia moved a conference call to discuss future output cuts to Thursday from an original June 9 schedule. The two oil-producing titans sparked a selloff in oil in early March — that predated the coronavirus crisis — when they couldn’t agree on extending output cuts for the first time in more than three years. 

But the pandemic and the havoc it has wreaked on the oil market, has taught both the importance of collaborating on cuts again. 

The conference call on Thursday could extend supply cuts through Sept. 1, a move many analysts had expected anyway, raising questions on why the market needed to go up as much as it did. 

“It’s hard to just jump into the WTI market from the long side at $36,” said Scott Shelton, energy futures broker at ICAP (LON:NXGN) in Durham, N.C.  

Latest comments

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Ppl use time within computers. Also unemployed. Tsunamis of cash is flowing through inexperienced hands, from savings accounts to trading accounts, filling trading "Cushing storage" more fast than crude is flowing in.. so ...Who thinks it is a wonder that prices are going up.. When this rally really end and the panic starts getting ground, what will happen to prices.. perhaps professional investors take a hold on poor "retail trader's" assets?
Anyone who believes the Russians are pumping significantly less is a bit gullible. Their infrastructure doesn't allow it. They are likely putting more in storage, either in their own or in neighboring countries for "delivery" later.
wait a minute.. what deeper cuts by? what Russia? the same country that said it couldn’t cut because of risk of pipe line damages? so they are now supposing to be cutting? come on! no-one can believe these tales any more! just because of such never ending lying the oil prices deserve to fall deep down again!
We all learned a lesson, but for how long ?
frothy is good word, production cuts for the most part simply means more reserves, demand is not likely to return to 2019 levels any time soon making the price recovery seem more like a mirage than a miracle
MaxAnalysis, the math is so clear that I'm amazed so many can't see it. The algos are running the asylum for sure.
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