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Oil ends with 1st weekly loss in 4; Russia fuel exports ban limits downside 

Published 09/21/2023, 09:11 PM
Updated 09/22/2023, 02:51 PM
© Reuters.

Investing.com — Crude prices had first weekly loss in four after the Federal Reserve signaled it might raise interest rates again before the end of the year — and anytime inflation gets out of hand. 

The downside in oil prices was, however, limited by Russia’s export ban on fuels, which counteracted fears that slowing economies and high interest rates could crimp demand for energy.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, crude for delivery in November settled at $90.03 per barrel, 40 cents, or 0.5%, on the day. WTI earlier hit an intraday high of $91.31, after Tuesday’s 10-month high of $93.74. For the week, the U.S. crude benchmark was down 0.6%, after a cumulative gain of almost 14% over three weeks.

London-traded Brent settled at $93.27 a barrel up, down 3 cents, or 0.03%. Brent rose to as high as $94.64 earlier on the day, after Tuesday’s 10-month high of $95.96. The global oil benchmark was down 0.7% on the week, after a cumulative gain of nearly 11% over three weeks.

The dollar strengthened after the Fed projected another quarter-percentage point rate  increase by the year-end, despite leaving rates unchanged for September itself at a policy meeting on Wednesday.

“We are prepared to raise rates further, if appropriate," Fed Chairman Jerome Powell told a news conference. "The fact that we decided to maintain the policy rate at this meeting doesn't mean we have decided that we have or have not at this time reached that stance of monetary policy that we are seeking."

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Energy-driven inflation one of the Fed's concerns

Powell said energy-driven inflation, led by the 30% rally in oil prices since June, was one of the Fed’s bigger concerns.

The Fed had raised interest rates 11 times between February 2022 and July 2023, adding a total of 5.25 percentage points to a prior base rate of just 0.25%. 

Economists fear that the Fed’s renewed hawkish stance will dampen global growth though many also agree that a lid has to be put on oil prices if the Fed is to achieve its annual inflation target of 2%.

Russia said on Friday it has implemented an immediate 'temporary' suspension of gasoline and diesel exports to all countries except for four former Soviet states and its own overseas military bases, with the goal of stabilizing its domestic market.

Kremlin fuel export ban will further tighten oil market

Russia's Transneft then suspended deliveries of diesel to the key Baltic and Black Sea (NYSE:SE) terminals of Primorsk and Novorossiysk on Friday, state media agency Tass said.

The Kremlin said the ban was “temporary” and designed to address rising energy prices in Russia. Russian wholesale gasoline prices were down nearly 10% and diesel down 7.5% on Friday after the ban. 

The ban will "bring new uncertainty into an already tight global refined product supply picture and the prospect that the impacted countries will be seeking to bid up cargoes from alternative suppliers," RBC said in a note.

Diesel is the workhorse fuel of the global economy, playing a crucial role in freight, shipping and aviation. Derivatives of diesel such as heating oil are particularly susceptible to winter price surges. Germany and the north-east of the U.S. are both heavily reliant on the fuel for heating homes.

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Russia is the world’s second-largest seaborne exporter of diesel after the U.S., according to Kpler, a freight data analytics company, and before its invasion of Ukraine was the single biggest diesel exporter to the EU. The EU and U.S. have largely banned imports of Russian refined fuel since February, forcing Moscow to reroute its sales to Turkey and countries in North Africa and Latin America.

Russian refined fuel sales, particularly diesel, remain a critical part of oil supplies. In August Russia exported more than 30mn barrels of diesel and gas-oil — a diesel proxy — by sea, according to oil cargo tracker Kpler.

(Peter Nurse and Ambar Warrick contributed to this item)

 

Latest comments

why does warm Camp keep on pretending he knows anything about the oil industry...
barani Krishnans views are lacking in political partisanship. I had dealings with corporate traders over the past 30 years. they have, and would still agree with Mr Krishnan's analysis about this corporate bs strategy, it is designed to fool narrow minded partisan types on the Right. The USA is the largest producer of petroleum on the planet and as long as crude prices remain above 60 $ a barrel the will continue to grow market share at the expense of opec+. domestic producers control over 9000 unused drilling permit. 2023 will see another record year of crude production in the United States.
Bullish afff going long
What happened to the price cap on Russian oil?
Canceled.
The Russian ban confirms bullish scenario for the oil price. Not enough oil in Russia. Also, the US rig count has dipped this week. The US oil producers react to small dips in the oil price stronger than they react to big surges in the price. They are reluctant to invest in hostile environment. Not enough Russian oil and not enough US oil, this leaves Saudis in full control.
 Do you mean recent proposal for royalties on metallic mining? Thanks God this has no chance to pass House. Dems just bring it in any time before another government shutdown, a horse-trading tool. However, this still shows how much Biden cares about mining “critical minerals”.
 Yup. We'll see.
no it doesn't warm camp...
Rig count.
The oil uptrend is unstoppable. Simple fact of life.
 Thanks, Max. You have a great one too, bud!
 It's kinda true. It does seem like Flynn is the only bull they let out of the doghouse once in awhile.
 I guess your next diatribe, if I could react in tune, would be about “courtesy street with two-way traffic”. Of course, you reserve this when talking to “political enemies” only. An empty-headed fan, like Maxie, could be just encouraged to insult.
yet another paid article.
engin I'm sure the authors get paid to write these articles, as slave-labour, by international law and convention, is both illegal and morally wrong..
 There is no secret that I'm against high oil prices. To me, there's only one industry that makes money when oil prices are high -- that's the oil industry itself, aside from those betting on higher oil prices. I write about oil from a socio-economic and the global economy, particularly, suffers oil prices are high.
 Well this cover story from Russian energy minister is one I've never heard before, and I suspect that they are seeing substantial demand decay, especially out of Asia, so this is getting ahead of price declines.  I just bought SCO and thinking about some Jan 24 puts on WTI.   What do you think?
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