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Oil treads water ahead of OPEC+ panel meeting, PCE inflation data

Published 01/26/2023, 08:52 PM
Updated 01/26/2023, 08:59 PM
© Reuters.

By Ambar Warrick

Investing.com -- Oil prices moved little on Friday and were set to end the week flat amid caution over an upcoming OPEC+ panel meeting, as well as more cues on the U.S. economy from a reading on the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge.

Ministers from Algeria, Kuwait, Venezuela, Russia, and Oman are set to meet virtually next week as part of a panel called the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC). The panel can call for a full meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies (OPEC+) and can also decide on crude output from the members of the panel.

But Reuters recently reported that the panel is unlikely to alter production levels, given that crude prices recovered sharply in early 2023, and that demand is forecast to surge as the Chinese economy recovers.

Brent oil futures rose 0.2% to $87.69 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose 0.3% to $81.22 a barrel by 20:31 ET (01:31 GMT). Both contracts rose sharply on Thursday following better-than-expected U.S. GDP data, but were set to end the week largely unchanged.

Markets were watching for any potential changes in output by the JMMC, especially as Russia faces U.S. and European price caps on its fuel exports. But Moscow has so far kept output steady, with China and India remaining major buyers of fuel.

Focus next week is also on the U.S. Federal Reserve’s first meeting for 2023, with a majority of traders forecasting that the central bank will hike rates by a relatively smaller 25 basis points.

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A slowdown or potential stopping in the Fed’s rate hike plans is expected to be positive for crude prices, given that it entails a weaker dollar and lesser pressure on the world’s largest economy.

U.S. personal consumption inflation data - the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge - is due later on Friday, and is expected to shed more light on the path of inflation and monetary policy.

Crude prices rallied in recent weeks on hopes that an economic recovery in China will drive up demand. The country, which is on a week-long Lunar New Year holiday, relaxed most anti-COVID restrictions earlier this year, and is expected to drive oil demand to a record high this year.

But given that China is still facing its worst COVID-19 outbreak yet, markets remain uncertain over the timing of such a recovery.

Latest comments

China china Russia Russia. America is broke. Pete , Brandon, Yelen and Kamala will figure it out.
Jim, it's amazing how you will find the excuse to turn any story into an anti-Biden rant. It's proof that he lives rent-free in your head, the same claim many were making about libs vs Trump. LOL.
spot on barani. more than a few of these types lurking in the comments section here..
this type of analysis is crap. excuses here and there. if, then, else, but everywhere. I'm not sure if this guy understands what he is talking about.
 Hello, you still don't get it, do you? It's not Ambar Warrick's job or mine to speculate on the timelines for these when the sources who said them -- i.e. WHO (on China COVID) and IEA (on China oil demand) did not specify them. You won't find it either on Bloomberg, Reuters, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times or even OilPrice. The reason is because each agency is working on its own modeling and still refining it (given how early we are into 2023). And the WHO and IEA are certainly not coordinating or talking to each other to answer your questions. The WHO is convinced that there will be an explosion in COVID infections this year and the IEA believes that oil consumption will still get to a record with the help of Chinese consumers. You're just annoyed that I promptly found the attribution to your question on China oil demand (the Seeking Alpha link) and made your rant look silly. So you are coming back with more nonsensical questions to save face yourself.
 lol. Are you seriously citing the WHO as a source of credible information? I think you just did me a favor and made my point for me. Thank you.
 Oh, so now you are contesting WHO's credibility? And just a moment ago you said "if you think China is just going to bounce back then you are not paying attention to what is happening in China on the ground" -- which is an implication that nothing in China is what the government claims it to be (which is exactly what the WHO has been saying too). Yet, you know slag WHO -- again to save yourself face for your silly rants.  agree. You just showed me yourself what you are. LOL
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