Oil falls 1.5%, ends week lower on China demand fears

By Erwin Seba

HOUSTON (Reuters) -Oil futures fell about 1.5% on Friday, finishing the week lower on declining Chinese demand and hopes of a Gaza ceasefire agreement that could ease Middle East tensions and accompanying supply concerns.

Brent crude settled down $1.24, or 1.5%, at $81.13 a barrel. West Texas Intermediate crude ended $1.12, or 1.4%, lower at $77.16 a barrel.

For the week, Brent was trading down more than 1% while WTI fell beyond 3%.

"Yesterday’s better-than-expected U.S. GDP growth figures initially supported the crude market," said George Khoury, global head of education and research at CFI. "However, these gains were overshadowed by concerns about declining Chinese oil demand."

Data released last week showing that China's total fuel oil imports dropped 11% in the first half of 2024 have raised concern about the wider demand outlook in China.

"The Chinese demand situation is going down the tubes here and crude oil prices are going down with it," said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho in New York.

China's economy is threatening to enter a deflationary cycle, where prices will fall because of falling demand, Yawger said.

"And that is about the worst possible scenario for a country that is the largest importer of crude oil on the planet," he said.

Meanwhile, demand from the world's top oil consumer was also expected to ease as U.S. refiners are preparing to cut back production as the end of the summer driving season in early September nears.

The nation's second largest refiner, Valero Energy (NYSE:VLO ), said on Thursday its 14 refineries would run at 92% of combined capacity in the third quarter. Valero's refineries ran at 94% in the second quarter.

In the Middle East, hopes of a ceasefire in Gaza have been gaining momentum.



A ceasefire has been the subject of negotiations for months, but U.S. officials believe the parties are closer than ever to an agreement for a six-week ceasefire in exchange for the release by Hamas of female, sick, elderly and wounded hostages.

Baker Hughes' count of U.S. oil drilling rigs, an early indicator of future output, increased by five to 482 this week and by three in July, raising the number of rigs for the first month since March.

Source: Investing.com

Последние публикации
Oil prices cut losses to remain on track for weekly gains after hefty Fed cut
20.09.2024 - 21:00
At United Steelworkers conference, members and leaders play down election divide
20.09.2024 - 21:00
Oil dips but poised to end week higher on Fed rate cuts, lower US crude stocks
20.09.2024 - 20:00
Factbox-How investors buy gold and what drives the market
20.09.2024 - 16:00
Oil prices drift lower, but set for weekly gains after hefty Fed cut
20.09.2024 - 16:00
Morning Bid: Taking stock after Fed glow, Japan/China hold
20.09.2024 - 14:00
European Commission president says she has arrived in Kyiv to discuss support for Ukraine
20.09.2024 - 10:00
Analysis-Global refiners face profit slump as new plants come online
20.09.2024 - 09:00
Gold prices rise after bumper Fed rate cut; copper upbeat on China stimulus
20.09.2024 - 09:00
Oil prices drift lower but set for positive week after rate cut
20.09.2024 - 05:00
Oil prices set to end week higher after US rate cut
20.09.2024 - 04:00
USTR to take comments on tariff hikes for Chinese polysilicon, wafers, tungsten
20.09.2024 - 02:00
Oil ends more than 1% higher on US rate cut, declining crude stockpiles
20.09.2024 - 00:00
Oil prices rise on easing demand worries after jumbo Fed rate cut
19.09.2024 - 22:00
Oil prices rise 2% after US rate cut
19.09.2024 - 22:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Анализ трейдера Анализ трейдера за 20.09.24
Добро пожаловать в чат поддержки!
*
*

Ваш запрос успешно отправлен!
Скоро с вами свяжутся.