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Oil starts November in the red on rate hike fear, after loss of war premium

Published 10/31/2023, 08:44 PM
Updated 11/01/2023, 03:48 PM
© Reuters.

Investing.com — The oil bull has come up for gasping for air after October’s sinking of crude prices — and isn’t finding relief from a Federal Reserve indicating that current US interest rates may not be high enough to effectively curb inflation.

The Fed is still quite some way from its 2% annual target for inflation, with latest data on US personal consumption expenditure standing at 3.4%. That suggested that another rate hike might come as early as December and was enough to send crude prices lower for a third day in a row.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, crude for December delivery, settled at $80.44 per barrel, down 58 cents, or 0.7% on the day.

The slide added to WTI’s drop of more than 10% for October, which came at Tuesday’s close, as oil traders conceded that the Israel-Hamas war wasn’t really in a position to deliver a geopolitical risk premium for crude, given its virtually zero impact thus far on oil traffic out of the Middle East.

Earlier on Wednesday, the US crude benchmark rallied nearly 3%, attempting to move on from October, its worst losing month in five. Week-to-date WTI is down almost 6%, after last week’s loss of nearly 3%.

UK-origin Brent crude’s most-active January contract settled at $84.63, down 39 cents, or 0.5%. Like WTI, Brent, the global crude benchmark, fell more than 10% in October and is down 6% week-to-date.

The Fed is not sure if US interest rates are high enough to bring inflation back to its target of 2% per year, Chairman Jerome Powell told a news conference on Wednesday, indicating that the central bank might impose another rate hike at its December policy meeting.

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“We are not confident policy is sufficiently restrictive,” Powell said after the Fed, at the end of its November policy meeting, opted to leave rates unchanged in a range of 5.25-5.5%. Prior to that, the central bank had raised rates 11 times between March 2022 and July 2023.

(Ambar Warrick contributed to this item)

Latest comments

Stocks remain a popular investment choice.
Economic indicators suggest moderate growth.
Keep trying to spread fear. You forgot to add demand destruction to your narrative. Amazing
That would be redundant on my part: The market is already doing the destruction on its own (I'm just reporting it)
Royce, gasoline crack at super low and so is demand at the pump. I'm not saying. Oil Price is based on EIA data. https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/US-Gasoline-Refining-Profits-Tumble-As-Demand-Weakens.amp.html
USD is at 0.00% for the day….
Powell did not indicate another rate hike. Market soars.
Arizona Joe. where were you?  WASHINGTON, November 1 - The Federal Reserve is not sure if US interest rates are high enough to bring inflation back to its target of 2% per year, Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday, indicating that the central bank might impose another rate hike as early as its next policy meeting in December. But the Fed is also “close to the end of the cycle” on rate hikes, Powell said, though it may have to do more to bring things its way.  “We are not confident policy is sufficiently restrictive,” Powell said after the Fed, at its November policy meeting on Wednesday, opted to leave rates unchanged in a range of 5.25-5.5%. The central bank has another policy meeting in December where it could raise rates one more time before the end of this year. The current range for rates is already the highest since 2001.
Powell didn't indicate another rate hike.....
More for you, Arizona Joe: Investing.com -- The Federal Reserve kept rates steady on Wednesday as the central bank continued its cautious monetary policy approach, though stopped short of ruling out further rate hikes.
kind of odd because gasoline prices have been dropping
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