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Oil rally stalls as Fed decision nears 

Published 20/09/2023, 18:32
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Investing.com -- Crude prices saw modest change on Wednesday as buyers seemed restrained ahead of a Federal Reserve update on U.S. monetary policy — despite weekly petroleum inventory data showing draws all around.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, crude for delivery in November was at $90.50 per barrel by 13:19 ET (17:19 GMT), up 2 cents, or 0.02%, on the day. The U.S. crude benchmark rose to $91.05 earlier in the session, after reaching $92.43 on Monday, its highest since November 2022. 

London-traded Brent was at $94.20 a barrel, down 14 cents, 0.2%. The global crude benchmark rose to $94.70 earlier in the day, after a 10-month high of $95.94 on Tuesday. 

“The closer we get to $100 Brent, the more nervous some traders may get which may show more clearly in momentum indicators,” said Craig Erlam, analyst at online trading platform OANDA. “And the Fed in particular may have contributed to some of (this)”.

Fed to hold rates but its verdict on inflation will be super important

The Fed’s policy-makers are expected to announce a hold on interest rates at their meeting on Wednesday, after 11 previous hikes that added 5.25 percentage points to a prior base rate of just 0.25% in February 2022. 

But what Chairman Jerome Powell says at his news conference after the policy meeting will be closely watched by markets for clues on Fed think for the rest of the year — especially with the central bank having two more policy meetings left on the schedule for November and December.

For context, the headline reading for the U.S. Consumer Price Index rose for the second month in a row in August, reaching a year-on-year growth of 3.7% from 3.2% in July. 

That was largely due to high pump prices of gasoline which accounted for more than half of the increase — a phenomenon that could put renewed pressure on inflation fighters at the Fed. The central bank’s desired inflation remains at a max 2% per year and it has vowed to get there with more rate hikes if necessary.

The Fed aside, an interest rate decision in China played out largely as expected. The Bank of England and the Bank of Japan are also set to decide on interest rates this week.

U.S. crude, fuel stockpiles down last week

U.S. stockpiles of crude oil and fuel products fell across the board last week as exports surged and imports fell amid a cutback as well in refining activity as the busy summer driving period ended, the government reported Wednesday.

The U.S. crude inventory balance fell by 2.136 million barrels during the week ended Sept. 15, according to the Weekly Petroleum Status Report of the U.S. Energy Information Administration, or EIA. Analysts tracked by Investing.com had expected a crude build of 0.25M barrels instead for last week to add to the 3.955M gain in the prior week to Sept. 8.

On the fuels side, the EIA reported a gasoline inventory decline of 0.831M barrels. The forecast consensus had been for a gasoline build of 1.1M barrels that would have added to the prior week’s build of 5.561M. Automotive fuel gasoline is the No. 1 U.S. fuel product.

With distillate stockpiles, there was a drop of  2.867M barrels versus the expected gain of 1.05M and the prior week’s rise of 3.931M. Distillates are refined into heating oil, diesel for trucks, buses, trains and ships and fuel for jets.

“We had runaway exports of crude versus lower imports last week, that’s basically what it came down to,” said John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital and a regular commentator on the trends and statistics in oil. “Also, refiners seem to have started dialing back a little on runs with the end of the peak summer driving season.”

Exports of U.S. crude climbed to a whopping 5.067M barrels per day last week versus the prior week’s 3.09M. Imports averaged 6.5M daily last week, down 1.1M from the previous week.  Refineries ran at 91.9% of their operable capacity last week, against a previous rate of more than 93%.

The estimated production of crude oil for last week remained at a 3-year high of 12.9 million barrels despite the EIA of late indicating declines in monthly output by U.S. oil drillers in its separately-published drilling productivity reports.

(Ambar Warrick contributed to this item)

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