Mayra P. Saefong, MarketWatch
SAN FRANCISCO
EnergiesNet.com 12 12 2022
Oil futures finished lower on Friday to end the week with a loss of about 11%, the largest weekly loss for the crude benchmark in more than eight months.
The shutdown of the Keystone Pipeline following news of a leak late Wednesday provided some support to the oil market early Friday, but of greater concern were worries about a global recession and lower crude demand from China.
Price action
- West Texas Intermediate crude for January delivery CL00, +0.79% CL.1, +0.79% CLF23, +0.79% fell 44 cents, or 0.6%, to settle at $71.20 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices based on the front-month contract finished 11.2% lower for the week and settled at the lowest since Dec. 20, 2021, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
- February Brent crude BRN00, +0.95% BRNG23, +0.95%, the global benchmark, declined by 5 cents, or nearly 0.1%, to $76.10 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, for a weekly loss of 11.1%. It settled at the lowest since Dec. 22 of last year.
- Back on Nymex, January gasoline RBF23, +0.18% added 0.3% to $2.0561 a gallon, but declined by 9.8% for the week.
- January heating oil HOF23, +0.68% settled at $2.7937 a gallon, down 3% for the session and losing 11.8% for the week.
- January natural gas ended at $6.245 per million British thermal units, up nearly 4.8%, for a 0.6% loss on the week.
Market drivers
Oil fell sharply this week as both the Group of Seven price cap and European Union embargo on Russian seaborne crude, which took effect on Monday, as well as the China economic reopening story, “fulfilled their end of the buy-the-rumor-sell-the-fact trade,” said Troy Vincent, senior market analyst at DTN.
This hit oil prices alongside the impact of a clearly slowing global economy, particularly in Europe and the U.S. where Energy Information Administration data increasingly reflect the “sharp slowdown in on-road freight and global trade moving into the holiday season,” said Vincent. “Weak U.S. gasoline and diesel demand is helping rebuild product inventories, bringing fuel prices lower and therefore limiting expectations for crude demand at refiners in the coming months.”
Oil prices had briefly moved higher Thursday on news of a pipeline shutdown late Wednesday, but finished that session at their lows of the year as pressure from oil demand worries outweighed support. Prices on Friday, also gave up early gains.
The Keystone pipeline, which carries oil from Canada to the Texas Gulf Coast remained shut due to a 14,000-barrel oil spill in Kansas, Reuters reported Friday.
Independent energy expert Anas Alhajji, who’s also managing partner at Energy Outlook Advisors LLC, wrote on Friday that the pipeline shutdown is expected to lower inventories at Cushing, Okla., increase crude via rail from Canada, support WTI and Latin American crudes, and widen price differentials between WTI and Canadian crude.
“The impact of the shutdown on crude quality is more important than quantity,” he said.
Also see: Why coal leads the rise in commodities this year
Meanwhile, U.S. Labor Department data showed Friday that wholesale prices rose 0.3% in November. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal has forecast a 0.2% gain. Although hotter than expected in November, inflation at the wholesale level is showing steady deceleration from the peak in March.
Separately Friday, the University of Michigan’s gauge of consumer sentiment rose to a preliminary December reading of 59.1 from a November reading of 56.8. Inflation expectations over the next year fell to 4.6% — the lowest since September 2021.
Still, the market is focused on the U.S. consumer price inflation report due out Tuesday, the day before the Federal Reserve’s decision’s on interest rates. There have been concerns that if the Fed raises interest rates too quickly, that could lead the economy into a recession, and lower demand for crude.
Oil prices were also sharply lower for the week, with traders “concerned that good days are gone for oil prices, when there were serious concerns about oil supply,” said Naeem Aslam, chief market analyst at AvaTrade, in a market update. “It seems like there is more than ample supply and the lawmakers in the United States are still encouraging oil drillers to pump as much oil as they can.”
Even so, major oil producers OPEC+ reduced their crude output by 700,000 barrels per day in November — the steepest monthly decrease since April, according to the latest Platts survey by S&P Global Commodity Insights released Friday.
marketwatch.com 12 09 2022