Connect with us
  • tg

Commodities

Current natural gas market news: experts have assessed the consequences of increasing Russian gas supplies to China for Europe

letizo News

Published

on

natural gas market news

All current natural gas market news today is centered around the Russian Federation. Russia is cutting gas supplies to Europe and at the same time increasing them to China. In Brussels, at least internally, they do not mind that Beijing is buying as much natural gas as possible from Moscow. The consulting firm Accenture Plc. says this is good for united Europe because it helps it fight the energy crisis. 

Oil and gas market news: pipeline gas restrains Chinese demand for liquefied natural gas (LNG)

The reason is that Russian natural gas from pipes is holding back demand in China for liquefied natural gas (LNG), which Europeans are now looking for across the world to replace Russian gas, Bloomberg says, citing Accenture director Ohan Kose. Even though the Power of Siberia pipeline exports pipe gas from Russia to China is still a fraction of what Moscow was supplying to Europe until February 24, due to its low price, it is successfully replacing expensive LNG in the Chinese market. Also, new gas pipelines are being built from Russia to China.

“It’s important that Russian gas goes to China,” Kose said last week, “because it reduces China’s demand for LNG and its price.

If you follow global oil and gas market news, you know that China also imports gas through pipelines from Central Asia. Beijing is now trying to buy as much cheap pipeline gas as possible and as little expensive liquefied gas as possible. Because of the pandemic and coronavirus lockdowns and the resulting slowdown of the Chinese economy, Beijing has not yet even entered the spot gas market this year, where, incidentally, it was the main player last year. The appetite for LNG in China, according to forecasts by experts, may remain low not only in August, but also in September.

Current european natural gas market news

At the moment Europe is closely watching the epidemiological situation in the Celestial Empire and the way China is coming out of the blackouts and starts to restore its economy. Economists at Goldman Sachs explained in a research note last week that the less LNG China buys, the more Europe gets. 

Accenture believes that if Russia stopped supplying gas to Europe completely, the price of gas could increase fivefold! Of course, this situation will last until spring. Kose is certain that the average price of gas next year will be lower than this year.

Gas consumption and demand is also being held back by the risk of a global economy sliding into recession. According to Accenture, the risk of a global recession would cut gas demand in the EU by 16% next year. Brussels is now persistently urging EU members to reduce gas consumption by 15% this winter. French energy company Engie SA, for example, reports that French residents have already begun to vigorously conserve electricity and reduce their gas consumption.

“The combination of lower demand in Europe and Asia and the fact that Russian gas has found new markets will lower gas prices in the medium term,” Kose forecasts. This is a positive for gas energy news. If the coming winter is harsher than the previous ones, high gas prices will certainly last longer, but they should decrease in the long run.

Commodities

Gold snaps five-week win streak, but bull run not over yet: MS

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com — Gold snapped a five-week wining streak Friday, but the yellow metal’s bullish run likely isn’t over yet as tailwinds including central bank demand have more room to go just as the tide of outflows from gold exchange traded funds are starting to turn.  

Gold prices rose 0.3% to $2,348.75, but took heavy losses earlier this week following easing Middle East tensions after Iran-Israel showed little appetite to escalate their tit-for-tat exchange.  

The path ahead for gold prices is set to be choppy but likely leans toward higher highs, rather than a reversal, Morgan Staley said, forecasting the odds are more in favor of its bull case scenario, which sees gold rising to $2,760 an ounce in the second half of the year, rather than its bear case scenario of a fall to $2,000 an ounce.

The strength in the demand for the yellow metal has provided it with extra clout to withstand the weight of rising real interest rates, which have a long history of hampering investor appetite for non-interest bearing assets like gold.

Gold is typically expected to have a “negative correlation with real yields, given it loses relative competitiveness in investor portfolios as real yields rise,” Morgan Stanley said, but is now showing a positive correlation with real yields on a 3-month basis as fundamental drivers have been dominating price action.  

Central bank purchases of bullion, led by People’s Bank of China, demand for safe havens amid rising geopolitical tensions, and growing demand for an inflation hedge have helped kept gold on the up, and up.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or
remove ads
.

These bullish factors, particularly central bank buying, aren’t likely to disappear anytime soon. 

Gold consumption in China rose 5.94% from a year earlier to 308.91 tons in the first quarter of the year, China Gold Association said Friday, driven by soaring safe-haven demand.

The PBoC bullion purchases continued for a 17th straight month in March, taking its total gold reserve to 2,262.67 tons by the end of Q1, according to the China Gold Association.

Meanwhile, ETF demand has been weak throughout gold’s rally as outflows have continued, but the tide of outflows are “starting to turn,” Morgan Stanley said.

U.S. and Asia ETFs have seen inflows since mid-March, according to the World Gold Council, but that has been offset by outflows in Europe.

While these fundamental positive drivers show no sign of cooling, the macroeconomic outlook, in which U.S. inflation appears to be more sticky, keeping rates higher for longer, has some doubting gold’s next move higher. 

“But if data stays strong, driving concerns of more sticky inflation, as well as elevated geopolitical risk, gold may stay well bid regardless,” Morgan Stanley said, adding that if a rate-cut is brought forward that is often another positive catalysts for gold.   

Continue Reading

Commodities

Oil settles higher on supply concerns in the Mideast, economic woes subdue gains

letizo News

Published

on

By Georgina McCartney

HOUSTON (Reuters) -Oil prices settled higher on Friday, garnering support from tensions in the Middle East, but a strong dollar and U.S. inflation data quashed hopes that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates soon, giving prices a ceiling.

futures settled up 49 cents, or 0.55%, to $89.50 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures settled up 28 cents, or 0.34%, to $83.85 a barrel.

Supply concerns supported prices as tensions continue in the Middle East.

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, said any rulings by the International Criminal Court, which is investigating Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks on Israel and Israel’s military assault on Gaza, would not affect Israel’s actions but would “set a dangerous precedent.”

As tensions escalate, Israel’s military said on Friday that its air force struck in Lebanon’s West Beqaa District and killed a militant who advanced attacks against Israel.

Israel stepped up air strikes on Rafah on Thursday after saying it would evacuate civilians from city in southern Gaza and launch an all-out assault despite allies’ warnings that doing so could cause mass casualties.

“Israel is not afraid to come and support themselves on their own if they have to, people are watching to see what happens between Netanyahu and Biden,” said Tim Snyder, chief economist at Matador Economics.

“The geopolitical element is not over, the proxy battles going on right now will continue,” and this is still providing support and helping to offset the negative pressure from the inflationary data, Snyder added.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or
remove ads
.

Meanwhile, macroeconomic pressures capped gains after data released on Friday showed growing inflation.

In the 12 months through March, U.S. inflation rose 2.7% after an advance of 2.5% in February. Last month’s increase was broadly in line with economists’ expectations.

The Fed has a 2% inflation target. The U.S. central bank is expected to leave rates unchanged at its policy meeting next week.

“The economic data this morning was enough for market participants to conclude that the Fed is not going to be forthcoming with interest rate cuts any time soon,” said John Kilduff, partner with Again Capital LLC.

“Geopolitical jitters in the market are what is keeping us aloft. Those two competing forces should keep us in check,” Kilduff added.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Reuters on Thursday that U.S. GDP growth for the first quarter could be revised higher, and inflation will ease after a clutch of “peculiar” factors held the economy to its weakest showing in nearly two years.

U.S. economic growth was likely stronger than suggested by the weaker quarterly data, Yellen said. Oil prices have flip-flopped since Yellen’s comments and the release of the inflation data on Friday.

Meanwhile, the dollar soared to a fresh 34-year high against the yen on Friday, bolstered in part by the U.S. inflation data.

“Dollar strength is helping to exert negative pressure today,” Kilduff said.

Elsewhere, OPEC Secretary General Haitham Al Ghais said in an op-ed article that the end of oil is not in sight, as the pace of energy demand growth means that alternatives cannot replace it at the needed scale, and the focus should be on cutting emissions not oil use.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or
remove ads
.
Continue Reading

Commodities

Oil prices settle higher to snap 2-week losing streak

letizo News

Published

on

Investing.com– Oil prices settled higher Friday, snapping a two-week losing streak after shrugging off dollar strength following in-line inflation data at a time when geopolitical tensions persist.  

At 14:30 ET (19:30 GMT), rose 0.3% to $89.85 a barrel, while rose 0.4% to $89.38 a barrel. 

PCE inflation rises in line with expectations

The dollar jumped as  increased 0.3% last month, taking the 12-month figure through March to 2.7%, compared with economists’ estimates for a 2.6% rise.  

The PCE price index is one of the inflation measures tracked by the U.S. central bank for its 2% target. 

Signs of sticky inflation in the country have resulted in investors reining in expectations that the Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates in the near future, even after softer-than-expected U.S. data released earlier this week. 

Baker Hughes rig count falls by most since November

The number of oil rigs operating in the U.S. fell to 506 from 511, according to data Friday from energy services firm Baker Hughes, marking the biggest weekly decline since November. 

The fall in rig count come even as data this week showed U.S. output remained steady at near record highs. 

oil production in the week ended Apr. 19, was 13.1 million barrels per day, unchanged from the prior week.

Middle East risks persist 

Prices rose in recent sessions as data showed overall U.S. shrank more than expected in the past week, indicating some tightness in global oil markets.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or
remove ads
.

Concerns over disruptions to Middle East supplies also remained in play as Israel stepped up its strikes against Gaza. While a war with Iran did not materialize, the Israel-Hamas conflict showed few signs of stopping. 

The U.S. was also set to mobilize more military aid for Israel after President Joe Biden approved a bill earlier this week.

This kept some elements of risk premium in play for oil prices, helping them weather concerns of weaker demand and softening global growth. 

Still, oil prices were trading well below five-month highs hit earlier in April, as a lack of immediate escalation in the Iran-Israel conflict saw traders price out some risk premium from crude. 

(Peter Nurse, Ambar Warrick contributed to this article.) 

Continue Reading

Trending

©2021-2024 Letizo All Rights Reserved