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Oil Pares Gains With U.S. Capitol Protests Shaking Risk Appetite

Saudi Arabia to lower output by 1m b/d in February, March. WTI futures little changed after surging 4.9% on Tuesday. 

Oil Pares Gains With U.S. Capitol Protests Shaking Risk Appetite
A droplet of petroleum drops from a fuel nozzle at a fuel pump. (Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg)

Oil pared gains late in the session as protests in Washington overtook the U.S. Capitol, overshadowing a draw in U.S. crude inventories and Saudi Arabia’s surprise pledge to unilaterally cut output in the next two months.

Futures eased off 10-month highs in choppy trading after the market settled Wednesday. Earlier, oil rose after a U.S. government report showed domestic crude stockpiles declined last week by the most since August and oil exports from Saudi Arabia plunged to zero for the first time in 35 years.

“This is as unsettling as it gets for capital markets and crude is right there with that,” said John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC. “When you have big gains in crude oil like you’ve had in the past couple weeks, that’s going to be one of the first things to go.”

Further limiting gains, the EIA report also showed increases in both gasoline and distillate stockpiles and declining fuel consumption.

Oil Pares Gains With U.S. Capitol Protests Shaking Risk Appetite

Still, prices earlier got a lift when Saudi Arabia raised pricing for oil customers in Asia and the U.S. after its shock move on Tuesday to cut an extra 1 million barrels a day of oil production in February and March. The reduction, Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said in a Bloomberg TV interview, was a “wonderful present and a wonderful surprise” for the oil industry. The cut will affect both domestic sales and exports, he said.

While the kingdom’s decision prompted a sharp rally across various areas of the oil market, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cautioned that the choice reflects expectations for weaker oil demand. Still, the move has spurred others to reevaluate their price outlook for this year and next, with Standard Chartered Plc raising its 2021 and 2022 average Brent forecasts by $7 a barrel each as “Saudi Arabia’s actions have significantly strengthened the floor for prices.”

Saudi Arabia is “returning to the swing producer role in order to keep the price of crude up, which means they are going to cede market share across the board to both OPEC and non-OPEC members,” said Bill O’Grady, executive vice president at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis. “That’s very bullish until they stop.”

Prices
  • West Texas Intermediate for February delivery rose 70 cents to settle at $50.63 a barrel
  • Brent for March settlement gained 70 cents to end the session at $54.30 a barrel
  • Both benchmarks were at the highest levels since late February

Beyond the tighter supply picture, oil and other petroleum products are expected to see outsized inflows when commodity indexes start their annual rebalancing later this week. Losses in crude prices last year have left the current weight of oil markets in the main commodity indexes much lower than target levels, Citi analysts including Aakash Doshi wrote in a report.

But keeping the reins on any further breakout higher, tighter measures to curb the spread of coronavirus remain a headwind to a recovery in fuel consumption. The EIA report showed gasoline demand on a pure week-over-week basis falling to its lowest since late May, spelling trouble for refining margins as a tighter global crude balance and straggling demand crimp profits for processing a barrel of oil.

“There were big builds to offset on the gasoline and distillate side, and implied demand was pretty weak,” said Matt Sallee, portfolio manager at Tortoise, a firm that manages roughly $8 billion in energy-related assets. But further out, “demand’s going to look significantly different in the back half of 2021. Maybe not back to normal, but not too far off 2019 levels.”

Other oil-market news
  • Freezing weather that’s gripped large parts of the northern hemisphere is delivering a winter blessing for oil, gas and coal prices as suppliers meet a surge in heating demand.
  • As the pressure grows on commodities trading houses and producers to cut pollution from their operations, Trafigura Group Ltd. has promised to slash some of its greenhouse gases by 30%.
  • Iran said the U.S. owes it $70 billion compensation for income lost as a result of sanctions on its oil exports, the state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting reported on its website, quoting an adviser to the Supreme Leader.
  • The Trump administration is auctioning off Arctic drilling rights just two weeks before a new president is inaugurated, giving oil companies a once-in-decades shot at potentially crude-rich territory in northeast Alaska that environmentalists say imperils a fragile wilderness.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.