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Oil sinks 5% as Moodys banking downgrade drops another shoe on crisis

Published 03/14/2023, 12:57 PM
Updated 03/14/2023, 02:49 PM
© Reuters.

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - The assurance of authorities that all’s well and dandy on the U.S. banking front hasn’t won the confidence of Moody's, which downgraded the sector on Tuesday, sending crude prices down almost 5% on the notion that an economy in trouble won’t help oil.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, crude settled down $3.47, or 4.7%, at $71.33 per barrel, after a two-month low at $70.94. With Monday’s 2.4% on WTI, the U.S. crude benchmark has lost  more than 7% since this week began.  

London-traded Brent crude settled down $3.32, or 4.1%, at $77.45. Like WTI, Brent hit a two-month low earlier in the session,  touching $77.05. The global crude benchmark has lost almost 7% since the start of the week, after accounting for the 2.4% slide in the previous session.

Crude prices have tumbled since Monday in the wake of last week’s collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (NASDAQ:SIVB), which forced the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp to seize control of the California-based lender and at least one other bank to prevent contagion. The Biden administration has assured depositors in U.S. banks that their money is safe and that there will be no rerun of the 2008 financial crisis. The Federal Reserve said it was conducting a thorough review to help plug holes in the banking system.

Despite this, Moody’s issued a downgrade of the banking sector, citing a “rapidly deteriorating operating environment” that it said carried risks associated with the Fed’s plan to continue raising interest rates. The central bank has added 450 basis points to rates over the past year to control headline inflation, which the Consumer Price Index showed stood at 6% during the year to February, three times above the Fed’s annual 2% target.

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What’s surprising, some analysts say, is oil’s continued tumble on the so-called SVB crisis despite Wall Street’s three major stock indices — the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq — all rebounding strongly from Monday’s slide.

“Oil prices are continuing to whipsaw while remaining within the broad ranges they've traded within since early December,” noted Craig Erlam, analyst at online trading platform OANDA. “Yesterday we saw Brent and WTI testing the lower end of these in response to the turmoil that erupted in the financial system that triggered widespread risk aversion.”

“Today we're seeing them trade lower again, albeit still higher than yesterday's lows. If we see markets settle down, that could prevent a break of the lows but oil traders, like those elsewhere, will remain nervous about the prospect of further turbulence. Suddenly, a break below the lows looks a much greater risk which may keep pressure on in the short term.”

On the oil supply front, OPEC, or the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, said in its monthly report released earlier on Tuesday that it was pumping about 28.92 million barrels of crude a day, or about 300,000 a day more than it expects will be needed in the second quarter. 

The surplus could be even larger if production from Russia continues to prove resilient to international sanctions, because OPEC’s outlook assumes a sharp drop in the country’s output next quarter. World oil consumption typically eases around this time, a softer patch between the end of winter and start of the summer driving season.

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Traders will be on the lookout as well for ideas on how U.S. oil inventories might have closed last week as they await the Energy Information Administration’s weekly report on supply-demand.

The first indications will come from the API, or American Petroleum Institute, after Tuesday’s market settlement.

The API will release at approximately 16:30 ET (21:30 GMT) a snapshot of closing balances on U.S. crude, gasoline and distillates for the week ended March 10. The numbers serve as a precursor to official inventory data on the same due from the EIA on Wednesday.

For last week, analysts tracked by Investing.com expect the EIA to report a crude stockpile build of 1.188 million barrels, versus the 1.694M barrel reduction reported during the week to March 3.

On the gasoline inventory front, the consensus is for a draw of 1.820M barrels that would add to the 1.134M barrel decline in the previous week. Automotive fuel gasoline is the No. 1 U.S. fuel product.

With distillate stockpiles, the expectation is for a drop of 1.172M barrels versus the prior week’s gain of 0.138M. Distillates, which are refined into heating oil, diesel for trucks, buses, trains and ships and fuel for jets, have been the strongest component of the U.S. petroleum complex in terms of demand.

Latest comments

Our economy did not the Moody's downgrade garbage. I do not see how the perils of 2 Banks that played with fire will affect the rest of our banking industry. Let the FDIC do its health checks and then downgrade the Banks that do not pass the stress test. For now, Moody and its management should shut the fuq up.
Investing employs rookies it appears.
one of the best joke ever written... Moodys downgrading the banking sector pushes oil down 5% ?? lol!!!!! Article written by chatGPT right?
but rally in bank stocks
Well said. Fuq Moody's
ChatGPT are not manipulative or deceptive.......
The IB analysts claimed banks collapse might cause financial instability......blame the Feds rate hike for their collapse ...... looks like the greedy blood sucking bsnks are squeezing Feds balls
Always the case.
I said about the same thing here -- http://www.investing.com/analysis/gold-is-new-normal-of-1900-likely-without-new-high-200636209
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣do you even read article before posting......
Do you even know how to read?
Conventional wisdom says rising interest rates are good for banks and oil. It's autos, new home sales, and business enterprise that will be hurt. A recession and market crash seems likely. Oil companies are over-producing and that's the biggest threat to oil stocks. I'll stay in cash.
markets up but oil down for the same news , we'll oil should follow the market or market will follow the oil
Or, you could have titled this article, "US Banks are In a Negative Moody with Oil back Down to 70"
Anybody want to try for 60? :)
Well, it looks like they had to practically break the bank to get oil back down to 71
:)
banks have not failed because of OIL; US should keep oil price reasonable. Inflation in US is because of so many factors. demand for US oil has decreased and it has patched inflation. now US should pay attention on other factors causing inflation. If oil price fall like today, US will get another hit. It will give straight hit on major source of income to the country
Moody's must be shorting bank stocks.
So Moody's downgrades the banking sector and oil drops on worries of an economy in trouble, yet the indices are all firmly green. Yeah, makes total sense
It doesn't, I agree. And that's what makes understanding these markets no easier.
The stocks that were on Red for over a year now are GREEN. Oil is naturally going down as a slower economy cannot support oil at these levels. Every time we have a recession oil hits 25-35$.
 Agree,
Oil will always have more use than garbage paper money. The bankers will not be able to keep it low for too long no matter how they manipulate the market.
It's the big oil prices that will over-produce and drive oil prices downward. The can't help themselves.
Pile of crap, banks are the foundation stone of the US
But US & Europe banks are up....so funny article they write...whatever comes to their mind.
 The humor is really on the trade side. I struggle to make sense of it on days like this and I empathize (even sympathize with my colleagues who are trying to a decent job of covering these cuckoo markets)
Barani..I would suggest they're not cuckoo, they're heavily manipulated since big money was beat up by the Reddit crowd and meme stocks. I'm guessing they're gearing up for the big rug pull, hence the falsely propped up markets
 That's a good perspective, yes. The macro trade seems to have taken it on the chin while equities have just been spared a hiding.
We are seeing the results of all the free money necessitated by the lock downs and other ill conceived pandemic policies. Many knew this was coming.
The SP 500 and Nasdaq will never see new highs ever again. Just like Japan’s stock index
Really? The US tanking for good? Do you even understand the cultural differences? and by the way did you even bother to check age profiles of both countries before making such a bold remark?
LOL.  Troll.  I'll bet you $10 million that you probably don't have but I do that you are wrong.
Your kids will never afford a home boomer
Moody's nailed it; three banks late.But now watch out for other banks. Anyone holding bank equity shares still? Uncle Sam (Joe B.) won't reimburse shareholders in case of a bust. So watch out bank shareholders.
Reimburse shareholders? That had never happened.
Meh. I own some majors like BAC and C. If those zero out, the country is in flames and no assets are safe. No banks, no economy.
Shareholders not reimbursed.  Depositors?   Yes.
#1 Holder of Moody's Berkshire Hathaway, Inc
moody is mad. rally continue . no rate hike sure
Moody's downgrade here, for those want a deeper read: https://www.moodys.com/research/doc--PBC_1361251
Bargain, is this a joke that moodys is being blamed for oil prices? because I do it funny hahaha
Yes, it IS funny because the stock market is up, yet the oil trade is being super skittish; go ask them why.
It's only technical. 76 and a bullish signal is given. 94 before may
Seems like they're trying to artificially hold down oil and therefore inflation. which will prolong it, but might dampen a bit... which is much worse.
Read the mood moodys go downgrade your D
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