Oil prices hit new highs since 2014

(New York) Oil prices hit a new high in more than seven years on Wednesday, helped by the lingering Ukraine crisis and some worrying indicators in the US inventories report.

Posted yesterday at 4:24 p.m.

The price of a barrel of Brent from the North Sea for delivery in March gained 1.99% to end at 89.96 dollars. Earlier, it had surpassed $90, for the first time since October 2014, and climbed as high as $90.47.

As for the barrel of West Texas Intermediate (WTI), also for maturity in March, it rose 2.04% to close at 87.35 dollars. The benchmark contract for the main American variety of black gold even went up to 87.95 dollars during the session.

“The market is integrating the risk of new geopolitical episodes on the Russian-Ukrainian border,” said Bart Melek, head of commodity strategy at TD Securities, in a note.

Possible developments “that could lead to sanctions, which would reduce the quantities of natural gas and oil available globally”, he continued.

In a letter delivered to Russia on Wednesday, the United States refused to rule out Ukraine’s membership of NATO, the main Russian requirement to reach a solution to this crisis.

In addition, a meeting of Russian, Ukrainian, French and German negotiators on Wednesday in Paris did not lead to any concrete progress.

Already incandescent, the market was not reassured by the weekly report on US oil inventories.

Crude reserves have increased much more than expected, by 2.4 million barrels against an expected million, but “if we did not have the strategic reserves, it would not look as good”, commented Bill O’Grady, responsible for of research at Confluence Investment Management.

Strategic reserves fell by 1.2 million barrels during the week ended January 21.

Used as an adjustment variable by the Biden government to relieve prices, strategic reserves have fallen by 30.5 million barrels since the beginning of September.

“The other factor” which made the operators react, “is that production is down”, underlined Bill O’Grady. It fell from 11.7 million barrels per day to 11.6, very far from its level two years ago (13), before the start of the pandemic.

“We’re in a strange world right now, where prices are going up but not increasing production,” said Bill O’Grady. “So the only way we’re going to balance the markets is by reducing consumption. »

Another concern is the low level of inventories in Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery location for WTI on which US futures contracts are based, said Matt Smith, head of oil analysis at Kpler.


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