Oil prices rise 1%, and Brent crude is above $80

Oil prices rise 1%, and Brent crude is above $80

Oil prices rose, during trading today, Friday, July 21 (2023), to continue to reap gains for the second day in a row, amid hopes for a recovery in demand.

This comes at a time when the markets are assessing the prospects for economic stimulus in China after weak economic data and the decline in oil stocks in the United States and cut supply from the main producers.

Oil prices are heading to record weekly gains, for the fourth time in a row. Brent crude is on track to gain 0.6%, while WTI is expected to gain 1.2%.

Oil prices today

By 06:37 a.m. GMT (09:37 a.m. Mecca time), the prices of benchmark Brent crude futures – for September delivery 2023 – increased by 0.99% ($ 0.72), to reach $ 80.43 a barrel.

West Texas Intermediate crude – for September delivery 2023 – rose 1.03%, to record $ 76.43 a barrel, according to figures monitored by the specialized energy platform.

And oil prices ended their trading, yesterday, Thursday, July 20, on the rise, exceeding the losses it suffered in the previous session.

A drilling platform in an oil field
A drilling platform in an oil field – archive

Oil price analysis

China’s weak economic numbers kept a lid on prices during the week; This week, the world’s second largest oil consumer reported disappointing GDP growth for the second quarter; This increases the possibility that the economy will not meet the government’s annual growth target of 5%.

However, sentiment in commodity markets has been revived on hope that the central government will implement more stimulus measures to support the economy.

The National Australia Bank analysts said, in a note, that the rise in crude oil prices came “in a positive commentary on Chinese stimulus and examining the effects from the stronger US dollar index.”

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On Wednesday, Beijing announced that it would lay out plans to stabilize growth in 10 sectors, as well as increase support for private companies.

oil supplies

Oil prices received support from recent data, including lower-than-expected inflation and moderate job growth, which convinced many investors and analysts that the July rate hike by the Federal Reserve will be the last in the current tightening cycle.

Supply fundamentals supported market sentiment; Analysts from ANZ Bank said in a note to clients: “Evidence of supply cuts from Saudi Arabia and Russia drove the recovery in oil prices this month.”

In early July, Riyadh announced the extension of a voluntary production cut of 1 million barrels per day until August, while Moscow said it would cut exports by 500,000 barrels per day next August.

ANZ noted that “tightness is already showing in stocks,” Reuters reported.

The Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday that US oil inventories fell last week, supported by a jump in crude exports as well as increased refinery utilization.


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