Oil down on disappointing signs on demand

(New York) Oil prices eased on Friday as concerns over the strength of demand returned to center stage ahead of an intense week for central bank monetary policymaking.



A barrel of Brent from the North Sea, for delivery in August, fell 1.54% to 74.79 dollars.

Its US equivalent, a barrel of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for delivery in July, fell 1.57% to 70.17 dollars.

The market did not have time to react to the announcement, made in the second half of the day by the US Department of Energy, of the effective purchase of three million barrels of crude oil to replenish the strategic reserves of the United States. .

Five of the ten companies that applied to sell their oil were awarded the offer.

The barrels were bought by the government at a price of 73 dollars per barrel on average, well below the price of 95 dollars per barrel at which these reserves had been sold, “a good deal for the taxpayers”, welcomed the Department of Energy in a statement. This oil will be delivered in August and stored in underground tanks at the Big Hill site in Texas.

The government has also issued another bid for another three million barrels of crude, which will be auctioned by June 20.

After the administration began tapping into these strategic reserves in September 2021 to pressure prices downward, they fell to their lowest level since 1983, at 353.6 million barrels.

On the market, prices, first up at the start of the session, fell as the weekend approached, which will be followed by a week full of events related to inflation and monetary policy.

The US Federal Reserve (Fed) meets Tuesday and Wednesday and is expected to leave rates unchanged, but investors await its new forecasts.

The European Central Bank (ECB) meets on Thursday and a further increase of a quarter of a percentage point is expected.

“Also, we continue to have these demand leaks,” commented John Kilduff of Again Capital. He points in particular to the disappointed hopes of the recovery in China. “There was so much optimism about recovery from the lifting of COVID-19 lockdowns, but it didn’t live up to expectations,” he said.

Inflation in China was near zero in May, as ex-factory prices continued to plunge, a sign of sluggish demand and a complicated environment for businesses, according to official figures released on Friday.

The consumer price index (CPI), the main gauge of inflation, rose 0.2% year on year in May, against 0.1% a month earlier, according to the National Bureau. Statistics (SNB) Chinese.


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