Oil price settled lower in volatile trading, with both benchmarks recording their biggest weekly declines in months, as growing recession fears negated any supply woes after weak economic data from China, Europe and the United States.
US West Texas Intermediate crude settled 44 cents lower at $71.02 a barrel, a new low for 2022. Brent crude settled 5 cents lower at $76.10 per barrel.
“Any concerns about supply are secondary to worries about the economy,” Mizuho analyst Robert Yawger said.
Oil prices had found some support and risen more than 1 percent earlier in the session after Russian President Vladimir Putin said the world’s biggest energy exporter could cut output in response to a price cap on its crude oil exports.
However, a slightly higher-than-expeted rise in US producer prices in November, and news of a partial restart on the Keystone Pipeline undid those gains and pushed the benchmarks more than a dollar lower. Keystone shut earlier this week after a 14,000 barrel in Kansas.
The US producer prices index (PPI) rose slightly more than expected in November amid a jump in the costs of services, according to a report from the US Labor Department.
The increase may make it more likely that the Federal Reserve will “step on the accelerator” on interest rate hikes, furthering fears of a looming recession, Yawger said.
Both crude benchmarks posted weekly losses of around 10 percent each. It was the biggest weekly decline since April for the US WTI futures, and since early August for Brent.
Both Yawger and Walter Zimmerman, chief technical analyst at ICAP, warned that if US crude falls below $70 per barrel, it could enter a freefall and hit the low $60s range over the upcoming sessions.
The market structure for WTI contracts switched to trade in contango over the next year for the first time since Nov. 2020, with contracts for near-term delivery cheaper than one year later. Brent contracts have also switched to trade in contango over the next six months.
A market in contango suggests less worry about the current supply situation due to weakened demand, and encourages traders to put barrels in storage.
In China, surging COVID-19 infections will likely depress economic growth in the next few months despite some restrictions being eased, economists said. – Reuters






