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Energy & precious metals – weekly review and outlook 

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Energy & precious metals - weekly review and outlook 
© Reuters.

Investing.com — The news came as quietly as it could on a Friday afternoon and passed without any discernible impact. And understandably too: The U.S. went up by one last week, after a drop of 127 over the past year.

But there was a significance to the story. It was the first time since June that U.S. energy firms increased the number of rigs actively drilling for oil in the country, according to a weekly update of the rig count by oil services firm Baker Hughes.

One oil rig, of course, means nothing — particularly if the count drops back the following week, and by a far greater amount.

But it could mean something if there’s a steady climb hereon.

If not anything else, a steady, albeit slow, climb will challenge the argument made day in and out by those convinced that this year’s near-20% slump in rigs will soon cause a tumble in U.S. crude production.

That argument has grown despite the U.S. Energy Information Administration, or EIA, adjusting upward its estimate on crude production to three-year highs of 12.8 million barrels per day in recent weeks, from 12.2 million at the end of July.

The EIA’s revisions came after it raised its production for U.S. crude under a new reporting methodology that took into account crude flowing from active oil wells compared with those that are drilled but uncompleted — the latter referred to as DUCs.

The revisions imply that active drilling rigs were about 10% more productive in 2021–2022 than previously estimated. Such drilling-rig productivity or efficiency would offset to some extent this year’s sheer drop in the rig count.

The EIA’s new methodology is, however, vehemently opposed by those who are long-oil, or wagering for crude prices to rise.

“The reality is that the trajectory of future US oil production would beak and the supply side would start to drain and that is happening,” said Phil Flynn, an energy analyst at Chicago’s Price Futures Group, whose many followers are made up of those who are long oil.

The rig count remains one of the crucial indicators of oil production. But even so, it’s a lagging indicator that could take months to show up in actual production. This may be why the EIA’s crude production estimates haven’t ticked down yet as the falling rig count hasn’t made a commensurate impact on U.S. crude.

But then again, we have to consider the EIA’s explanation about the higher drilling efficiency for the remaining active wells, a phenomenon that could well challenge any argument about falling rigs.

There are many who contend that the EIA is going about the whole thing wrongly, and for devious reasons too, they say. Their theory is based on the conspiracy of an entire U.S. energy department working in cahoots with the White House to cook up numbers on drilling efficiency. The accusation does not seem to take into account career professionals at the department who’ve dedicated their lives working for the betterment of the energy sector and the data integrity that’s sacrosanct to their work.

But there are also economists like Adam Button, who while bullish on oil, are pragmatic about the lift current crude prices can provide to production.

“It’s tough to see how U.S. oil production is higher at the end of next year if this doesn’t turn around quickly,” Button said, referring to the oil rig count, in a blog on the ForexLive platform on Friday.

He, however, added: “There is plenty of talk about discipline among U.S. oil producers but $87 oil has a way of eroding that.”

The last line was in reference to the pre-weekend settlement for U.S. crude, which in March stood at a low of beneath $65.

Oil: Market Settlements and Activity

Oil prices rose for a second week in a row on Friday as traders hedged against supply insecurities, ramped up by concerns that Saudi Arabia and Russia will be removing a combined 1.3 million barrels per day from the market till the year-end.

Both New York-traded WTI, or West Texas Intermediate, crude and its London-based peer, Brent, reversed Thursday’s drop of close to 1% as the weekend approached.

did a final trade of $87.23 on Friday after officially settling the session at $87.51 per barrel, up 64 cents, or 0.7%, on the day. The U.S. crude benchmark hit a 10-month peak of $88.09 on Wednesday. With a net gain in three days versus two, WTI rose 2.2% on the week, extending the prior week’s 7.2% rally.

did a final trade of $90.44 on Friday after officially settling the session at $90.65, up 73 cents, or 0.8%, on the day, recapturing the $90 handle which it momentarily lost for the first time on Thursday after gaining it on Tuesday. For the week, the global oil benchmark rose 2.4%, extending the prior week’s 4.8% gain.

Brent’s rise to above $90 came with less than three weeks left of summer, the season Americans like driving the most. With the fall season of lower oil usage set to begin on Sept. 23, crude prices would typically retreat a little, sometimes meaningfully, in the world’s largest consuming country.

But that may not happen this time, not with Saudi Arabia’s target of ultimately getting oil to $100 a barrel or beyond. The Saudis, who control much of the world’s oil exports, have been trying to bring oil back to triple-digit pricing since losing that advantage in August 2022, when Brent crude hovered above $105 a barrel.

Key to this is the 1 million barrels per day in additional cuts, on top of other existing production rationing, that the Saudis have been carrying out since July. By extending this till the year-end — and widening it with the help of Moscow which will cut 300,000 barrels per day of Russian production — the kingdom is hoping to create a different sort of market phenomenon for pricing.

Fear of less oil for the market to play with was playing on traders’ minds, particularly with the approach of the weekend which tends to put the market on a hedging overdrive, said analysts.

“Oil prices have consolidated a little as we’ve moved through the week but the trend remains very positive for crude, backed once again by the decision from Saudi Arabia and Russia to extend supply restrictions to the end of the year,” observed Craig Erlam, analyst at online trading platform OANDA.

“A lot more oil [is] off the market at a time when it’s clearly quite tight, albeit with a global economic outlook that is highly uncertain. Demand may still wane but traders appear to be working on the assumption of soft landings and mild recessions at worst. China is another unknown with slow and steady growth, by its standards, looking like the path ahead.”

Data on Thursday showed overall Chinese exports and imports fell in August, as sagging overseas demand and weak consumer spending squeezed businesses.

However, even in times of lackluster economic activity, China tends to bolster its storage capacity, particularly with the availability of cheap Russian crude. Last month, Chinese crude imports rose nearly 31%.

Meanwhile, questions remain about whether central banks in the United States and Europe will continue their aggressive interest rate hike campaigns to tame persistent inflation.

The Saudis are “acutely aware of the tightrope” which they walk between tight supplies and the limited progress in fighting achieved by central banks, said John Evans at oil broker PVM.

Oil: WTI Technical Outlook

WTI’s close of above the 100-week SMA, or Simple Moving Average, statically aligns with the $85.90 support, adding more fuel to its bullish bias, said Sunil Kumar Dixit, technical strategist at SKCharting.com.

As long as the momentum in the U.S. crude benchmark maintains stability at above the 5-day EMA, or Exponential Moving Average dynamically positioned at $86.60, “oil bears will have to remain in the waiting lounge”, Dixit remarked.

He, however, cautions that the ride up will probably be smaller after this.

“It should be noted that the aforementioned 5-day EMA is the first line of defense for the longs,” Dixit said. “There is limited room for immediate upward advance towards the initial resistance of $88.50 and $89.50, before WTI’s embarkation towards major overhead resistance at $96.”

Weakness in chasing the heights can be witnessed if $89.50 proves to be a resistance as well, which may gain affirmation with a close below the 5-day EMA, said Dixit.

“Such downward consolidation below the 5-Day EMA will aim for a drop towards the horizontal support of $84.90 – $84.40,” he said. “If this support area fails, we can expect a drop to $83.70 and $82.80.”

Gold: Market Settlements and Activity

The prospect of gold breaking out solely on a Fed pause in rates was challenged again this week as the yellow metal posted a weekly loss as its nemesis, the , shot up instead.

In Friday’s trade, gold futures’ most-active did a final trade of $1,942.60 an ounce, after officially settling the session at $1,942.70, up 20 cents on the day. Yet, losses in three prior sessions after Monday’s U.S. Labor Day holiday meant a negative week for gold futures, which finished the five-day period down by a net 1.2%, practically giving back the previous week’s 1.3% gain.

The , which is more closely followed than futures by some traders, settled at $1,919.15, down 57 cents, or 0.03%. For the week, the spot price, which is reflective of real-time trades in bullion, was down 1.1% versus the prior week’s 1.3% gain.

The previous week’s gain came on the back of the U.S. report for August, which saw unemployment tick up to 3.8% from July’s 3.5% despite a gain of 187,000 jobs versus the forecast 170,000. The higher jobless rate reinforced the notion that the Fed will hold rates unchanged when it meets on Sept. 20 to review U.S. monetary policy, sending gold momentarily higher last week.

But as this week began, speculation resurfaced of the Fed exercising another rate hike or more before the end of the year, in its bid to bring inflation to its annual target of 2%.

Inflation, measured by the , or CPI, fell from a four-decade high of more than 9% per annum in June 2022 to as low as 3% in June this year. But as of July, it began to perk again, reaching 3.2%. That raised the possibility of the Fed, which has already added 5% to interest rates over the past 18 months, to turn aggressive again on monetary policy. That sent the Dollar Index to six-month highs.

Since the latest non-farm payrolls surfaced a week ago, the spot price of gold has moved just about $15 an ounce, going from a settlement of just below $1,940 on Sept. 1 to trade in a range of between $1,920 and $1,925 in the latest session.

Gold chartist Sunil Kumar Dixit said the same $15 play is what the spot price needs to crack in order for a new price direction to emerge.

Paramount to the bears in gold now is a push of the spot price beneath the key $1,1915 support, said Dixit.

For the longs, it’s a clear break above the $1,930 resistance, he said.

“Gold has had another interesting week, with last Friday’s jobs report feeling like a distant memory,” said Ed Moya, analyst at online trading platform OANDA. “It didn’t give it anything like the boost that it appeared it would on the basis of the numbers themselves, almost all of which looked very favorable.”

Moya noted that gold’s slide this week also came on the back of U.S. economic data suggesting that a soft landing, rather than a hard recession, could be the scenario for the world’s largest economy by the end of the year.

“Perhaps the yellow metal has found steady ground in the $1,900-$1,950 region as we await next week’s inflation data and the Fed meeting the following week,” he said, referring to the upcoming August update of the CPI and the of the central bank.

Gold: Spot Price Outlook

Spot gold’s bounce back from the $1,915 confluence support zone, marked by the Daily Middle Bollinger and the 200-day SMA, met with resistance at the 50-day EMA of $1,930, resulting in a drop to $1,917, SKCharting’s Dixit noted.

“The bulls have however a ray of hope with settlement above the mentioned inflection point for resuming an upward advance to retest $1,930,” said Dixit. “Clearing through this zone will put spot gold back on the bullish path for $1,940-$1,948.”

Strong acceptance above $1,948 will also favor the next leg higher at $1,971-$1,975, he said.

“If this support cluster fails to hold, we are likely to see gold dropping to $1,910, followed by the 50-week EMA of $1,899. A break below $1,899 opens the way for deeper losses.”

Major downside support was seen at the monthly Middle Bollinger Band of $1,858, he added.

Natural gas: Market Settlements and Activity

The front-month on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Henry Hub did a final trade of $2.618 per mmBtu, or million metric British thermal units on Friday after officially settling the session at $2.605, up 2.6 cents or 1%.

For the week though, October gas fell 16 cents, or 5.8%.

Natural gas: Technical Outlook

Natural Gas continues to coil within a narrowing range of the 100-day SMA of $2.51 which acts as horizontal support and the $2.70 level, which serves as resistance, said SKCharting’s Dixit.

“The market appears to be waiting for a break above the descending 200-day SMA of $2.90,” Dixit said. “Above $2.90 and $3.00, the next resistance levels would be $3.17 and $3.24.”

But a break below $2.50 will turn the short-term trend in gas back towards bearish, with a downside potential retest at $2.25 and $2.00, he said.

Disclaimer: Barani Krishnan does not hold positions in the commodities and securities he writes about.

Commodities

Oil prices post 3% annual decline, slipping for second year in a row

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By Georgina McCartney

HOUSTON (Reuters) -Oil prices fell around 3% in 2024, slipping for a second straight year, as the post-pandemic demand recovery stalled, China’s economy struggled, and the U.S. and other non-OPEC producers pumped more crude into a well-supplied global market.

futures on Tuesday, the last trading day of the year, settled up 65 cents, or 0.88%, to $74.64 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude settled up 73 cents, or 1.03%, to $71.72 a barrel.

The Brent benchmark settled down around 3% from its final 2023 closing price of $77.04, while WTI was roughly flat with last year’s final settlement.

In September, Brent futures closed below $70 a barrel for the first time since December 2021, and this year Brent broadly traded under highs seen in the past few years as the post-pandemic demand rebound and price shocks of Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine began to fade.

Oil will likely trade around $70 a barrel in 2025 on weak Chinese demand and rising global supplies, offsetting OPEC+-led efforts to shore up the market, a Reuters monthly poll showed on Tuesday.

A weaker demand outlook in China in particular forced both the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and the International Energy Agency (IEA) to cut their oil demand growth expectations for 2024 and 2025.

The IEA sees the oil market entering 2025 in surplus, even after OPEC and its allies delayed their plan to start raising output until April 2025 against a backdrop of falling prices.

U.S. oil production rose 259,000 barrels per day to a record high of 13.46 million bpd in October, as demand surged to the strongest levels since the pandemic, data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) showed on Tuesday.

Output is set to rise to a new record of 13.52 million bpd next year, the EIA said.

ECONOMIC, REGULATORY OUTLOOK

Investors will be watching the Federal Reserve’s interest rate-cut outlook for 2025 after Fed bank policymakers this month projected a slower path due to stubbornly high inflation.

Lower interest rates generally spur economic growth, which feeds energy demand.

Some analysts still believe supply could tighten next year depending on President-elect Donald Trump’s policies, including those on sanctions. He has called for an immediate ceasefire in the Russia-Ukraine war, and he could re-impose a so-called maximum pressure policy toward Iran, which could have major implications for oil markets.

“With the possibility of tighter sanctions on Iranian oil with Trump coming in next month, we are looking at a much tighter oil market going into the new year,” said Phil Flynn, a senior analyst for Price Futures Group, also citing firming Indian demand and recent stronger Chinese manufacturing data.

China’s manufacturing activity expanded for a third-straight month in December, though at a slower pace, suggesting a blitz of fresh stimulus is helping to support the world’s second-largest economy.

Buoying prices on Tuesday, the U.S. military said it carried out strikes against Houthi targets in Sanaa and coastal locations in Yemen on Monday and Tuesday.

The Iran-backed militant group has been attacking commercial shipping in the Red Sea for more than a year in solidarity with Palestinians amid Israel’s year-long war in Gaza, threatening global oil flows.

© Reuters. The sun sets behind the chimneys of the Total Grandpuits oil refinery, southeast of Paris, France, March 1, 2021.  REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/File Photo

Meanwhile, oil stocks fell last week while fuel inventories rose, market sources said, citing American Petroleum Institute figures on Tuesday.

Crude stocks fell by 1.4 million barrels in the week ended Dec. 27, the sources said on condition of anonymity. Gasoline inventories rose by 2.2 million barrels, and distillate stocks climbed by 5.7 million barrels, they said.

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Commodities

Gold set for brightest year since 2010 on rate cuts, safe-haven demand

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By Daksh Grover and Sherin Elizabeth Varghese

(Reuters) – Gold prices were set to end a record-breaking year on a positive note on Tuesday as robust central bank buying, geopolitical uncertainties and monetary policy easing fuelled the safe-haven metal’s strongest annual performance since 2010.

rose 0.4% to $2,615.00 per ounce as of 0927 GMT, while U.S. gained 0.4% to $2,627.30.

As one of the best-performing assets of 2024, bullion has gained more than 26% year-to-date, the biggest annual jump since 2010, and last scaled a record high of $2,790.15 on Oct. 31 after a series of record-breaking rallies throughout the year.

“Rising geopolitical risks, demand from central banks, easing of monetary policy by central banks globally, and the resumption of inflows into gold-linked Exchange Traded Commodities (ETC) were the primary drivers of gold’s rally in 2024,” said Aneeka Gupta, director of macroeconomic research at WisdomTree.

The metal is likely to remain supported in 2025 despite some headwinds from a stronger U.S. dollar and a slower pace of easing by the Federal Reserve, Gupta added.

The U.S. Fed delivered a third consecutive interest rate cut this month but flagged fewer rate cuts for 2025.

Donald Trump’s incoming administration was also poised to significantly impact global economic policies, encompassing tariffs, deregulation, and tax amendments.

“Bullion bulls may enjoy another stellar year ahead if global geopolitical tensions are ramped up under Trump 2.0, potentially pushing investors towards this time-tested safe haven,” said Exinity Group Chief Market Analyst Han Tan.

Bullion is often regarded as a hedge against geopolitical and economic risks and tends to perform well in low-interest-rate environments.

“We expect gold to rally to $3,000/t oz on structurally higher central bank demand and a cyclical and gradual boost to ETF holdings from Fed rate cuts,” said Daan Struyven, commodities strategist at Goldman Sachs.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A woman picks a gold earring at a jewellery shop in the old quarters of Delhi, India, May 24, 2023. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis/File Photo

Spot silver was steady at $28.96 per ounce, palladium rose 0.8% to $910.70, and platinum added 0.4% to $904.56.

Silver is headed for its best year since 2020, having added nearly 22% so far. Platinum and palladium are set for annual losses and have dipped over 7% and 17%, respectively.

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Commodities

Gold prices steady amid thin year-end trading, set for stellar yearly gains

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Investing.com– Gold prices were largely unchanged in Asian trade on Tuesday amid thin year-end trading, although they were set for stellar yearly gains helped by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rate cuts this year.

was largely unchanged at $2,607.65 per ounce, while expiring in February edged 0.2% lower to $2,620.22 an ounce by 00:23 ET (05:23 GMT).

Trading in gold typically sees thin volumes and subdued prices toward the year-end as many institutional traders and market participants close their books ahead of the holiday season.

Gold set for hefty yearly gains

The yellow metal has risen more than 26% in 2024 due to the Fed’s outsized rate cuts earlier this year and geopolitical tensions around the globe.

When interest rates are low, the opportunity cost of holding gold decreases compared to interest-bearing assets like bonds or savings accounts. As a result, investors typically allocate more capital to gold as a store of value and a hedge against uncertainty.

While gold prices rose for most of the year, the Fed’s December meeting acted as a bump after it signaled fewer rate cuts in the upcoming year.

Policymakers forecasted only two more rate cuts in 2025, against precious expectations of four cuts as sticky inflation remained a major concern.

Gold prices had fallen sharply after the Fed meeting and have seen subdued movements since then, reflecting a cautious outlook for next year.

With expectations of fewer rate cuts, the dollar has strengthened further, creating pressure on gold.

A stronger dollar weighs on gold prices as it makes the yellow metal more expensive for buyers using other currencies.

Other precious metals inched lower on Tuesday. edged 0.4% lower to $913.65 an ounce, while inched down 0.3% to $29.315 an ounce.

Copper subdued even as China’s factory activity expands

Among industrial metals, copper prices were subdued as a strong dollar weighed.

The was slightly weaker in Asian trade on Tuesday but remained near a two-year high it reached earlier this month.

Data on Tuesday showed that China’s  expanded for a third straight month in December as a raft of fresh stimulus measures continued to provide support.

However, the rise was slightly lower than market expectations and below the previous month’s reading.

Benchmark  on the London Metal Exchange inched 0.2% lower to $8,925.50 a ton, while February  were largely unchanged at $4.0885 a pound.

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