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Oil Gains With Rising Inflation Boosting Appeal of Commodities

Oil edged lower in Asia as rising U.S. fuel stockpiles punctured the optimism.

Oil Gains With Rising Inflation Boosting Appeal of Commodities
Oil drips from the nozzle of a fuel pump hose. (Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg).

Oil rose to the highest settle in over two years, drawing support from higher-than-forecast U.S. inflation data and a strong demand outlook.

Futures in New York rebounded from a plunge of as much as 1.8% earlier on Thursday that followed reporting of U.S. removing sanctions on a former Iranian oil official.

Crude found support with U.S. consumer prices in May topping forecasts, extending a months-long buildup in inflation that is seen helping spur more interest in alternative assets like commodities to find yield. At the same time, oil’s market structure strengthened amid recovering demand and signs global supplies may be less than expected.

“The outlook for oil demand is staying strong and getting stronger,” said John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC. Meanwhile, “there’s an inflation pulse rippling through the commodity sector, and crude oil is a big participant as a base hedge element against inflation.”

Oil Gains With Rising Inflation Boosting Appeal of Commodities

Prices remain over 40% higher this year. Even as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries expects the global demand recovery to gather steam in the second half of the year, the spare capacity buffer of the group and its allies have is seen being less than 80% than what it is on paper. OilX analysts also flagged “several signs” in their data that oil supplies worldwide are surprising to the downside, reflecting a combination of mature field declines and maintenance that was delayed into this year.

The U.S. announced it deleted sanctions on a number of people, including former managing director of the National Iranian Oil Company.

“I would not read too much into Treasury’s action today to remove sanctions against an Iranian oil official,” said Hagar Chemali, a nonresident senior fellow with the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center. “The fact that no statement was made in connection with this de-listing is Treasury’s way of saying there isn’t much there there.”

Prices
  • West Texas Intermediate for July delivery rose 33 cents to settle at $70.29 a barrel, the highest since October 2018
  • Brent for August settlement rose 30 cents to $72.52 a barrel, the highest since May 2019

In a sign of wider market strength, nearby futures contracts were outpacing the gains in subsequent months. The prompt timespread for Brent closed at its strongest level since April on Thursday, rising above 50 cents a barrel. That structure indicates tight supply in the Atlantic Basin region.

Meanwhile, a longer-term debate continues to rage about the viability of oil investments. Group of Seven leaders are discussing plans to shift the balance of car-buying away from gasoline to greener vehicles by the end of the decade. That comes just a day after Shell said it would hasten its reduction in carbon emissions.

Other market news:
  • Saudi Arabia gave full contractual volumes of oil for July loading to at least four customers in Asia, according to people familiar with the matter.
  • Trafigura Group racked up its strongest ever half-year profit as the commodities trading giant cashed in on wild moves in oil and metals prices caused by the pandemic.
  • Traffic is pretty much back to pre-pandemic levels on roads criss-crossing the Americas and most of Europe as diminishing coronavirus cases tempt commuters back into their cars.
  • A pair of shale entrepreneurs agreed to buy a swath of Permian Basin oil wells and drilling rights from Occidental Petroleum Corp. for $508 million, the duo’s second such deal in less than two weeks.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.