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Commodities

Energy & precious metals – weekly review and outlook

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

Investing.com – This isn’t how the Saudis imagined it would be. There’s also no certainty after this that it’ll play out the way they want it to be.

We’re talking, of course, about the so-called demand for oil and how it’s weighing on crude prices, which reached July lows of beneath $75 a barrel in the just-ended week. 

While the Saudi-Russia led oil producing alliance OPEC+ has a meeting on Nov. 26 that could again introduce a tighter supply mentality in the market, the group’s exports for now are rising. Latest OPEC+ data shows an expected seasonal rise of 180,000 barrels led by Iraq and Iran.

In the meanwhile, buying of oil for speculative purposes had plunged. 

“The petroleum buyers are gone, unless you are talking oil call options, as supply and demand take a back seat to rising macroeconomic fears,” Phil Flynn, energy analyst at Chicago’s Price Futures Group, wrote as crude futures finished with a third straight week of losses after a four-month low earlier in the week. “Maybe the buyers of oil have been taken away from the mother ship or maybe they have just ridden off into the sunset, but the reality is we are seeing a short oil position of epic proportions as the market seems to remove the risk of ever rising again.”

To hear one of the market’s loudest oil bulls admit that people have been fleeing the long crude game like rats abandoning a sinking ship should be a wake-up call to those who kept drumming for a return to $100 pricing in recent weeks.

“Underneath it all, the crash in the price of oil is either a very ominous sign for the state of the global economy or a sign that it is being driven by fear and not on supply and demand fundamentals,” said Flynn. “The oil market swing in mood has gone from pricing in the biggest threat to global oil supply since the Arab oil embargo 50 years ago to almost a record short position in the history of the oil futures markets.”

And with a late-week rebound in Treasury yields, the Fed may also have to raise rates to get investors interested in US bonds — adding to market unease that the central bank’s near two-year-long monetary tightening wasn’t over.

Reinforcing that notion, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said she was not ready yet to call an end to rate hikes, echoing Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s comments on Thursday.

US consumer sentiment also fell for a fourth straight month in November and households’ expectations for inflation rose again.

Pierre Andurand, one of the most closely-followed hedge fund managers in oil, pointed out that the net long speculative positioning in oil – comprising crude products, options and delta futures – was fast approaching lows not seen since the data was introduced in 2011. 

The managed money category in the so-called Commitment of Traders Report showed that hedge funds sold about 400 barrels in the last 6 weeks alone. 

“There have been macroeconomic worries for a while now,” Andurand said. “However, demand growth has consistently been revised up during the year, and mobility data shows an acceleration in demand and demand growth. Some point to softness in the physical market.”

Weak Chinese economic data this week increased worries of faltering demand. Refiners in China, the largest buyer of crude from Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest exporter, asked for less supply for December.

“Concerns about demand have replaced the fear of production outages related to the Middle East conflict,” analysts at Commerzbank said.

Oil: Market Settlements and Activity 

New York-traded , or WTI, crude for delivery in December did a final trade of $77.35 on Friday after officially settling the session at $77.17, up $1.43, or 1.9%. 

For the week though, WTI was down 4.1%, after prior back-to-back weekly losses of 6% and 3%. That came after the US crude benchmark 11% tumble for October. 

London-traded crude for the most-active January contract did a final trade of $81.70 per barrel on Friday, after officially settling the session at $81.43, up $1.42, or 1.8% after Thursday’s 0.6% gain. For the week, Brent was down 3.8%, after back-to-back weekly losses of 6% and 2%. Prior to that, the global crude benchmark lost 11% in October.

Oil: WTI Technical Outlook

A WTI break below the 200-Day SMA, or Simple Moving Average, statically positioned at $78.10, is a significant drop that turns out to be a resistance for immediate recovery attempts that begin from the lows of $74.90, said Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at SKCharting.com.

“A rebound from the lows may face challenges at $78.60 and $79.90,” Dixit added.

Gold: Market Settlements and Activity 

Gold’s most-active contract on New York’s Comex, December, did a final trade at $1,942.70 per ounce on Friday, after officially settling the session at $1,937.70, down $32.10, or 1.6% on the day. The benchmark gold futures contract finished the week down $61.50, or 3.1% — versus the previous week’s near-flat finish.

The , more closely watched by some traders than futures, settled the session at $1,938.28, down $20.32, or 1.04% on the day. The spot price, which reflects real-time trades in bullion, finished the week down 2.8% — adding to the previous week’s drop of 0.7%. 

Gold: Spot Price Outlook 

Post-rejection from the $2,010 high has seen spot gold continuing to decline, extending the correctional wave that reached the 38.2% Fibonacci zone at $1,933 — which, in itself, came from the retracement of the $1,810-$2,010 bullish wave, said SKCharting’s Dixit.

“Next support for spot gold is seen aligned with the 100-Day SMA of $1,926.80,” said Dixit. “Immediate resistance shifts base at $1,963.”

Natural gas: Market Settlements and Activity 

’ most-active futures contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Henry Hub, December, did a final trade at $3.017 on Friday, after officially settling the session at $3.033 per million metric British thermal units, down 0.3%.  The benchmark gas futures contract finished the week down almost 14% — versus the previous week’s 11% gain.

Natural gas: Technical Outlook

A correctional wave from $3.63 on December gas leans on an ascending channel support line of $2.98 and settles at the 50-day EMA, or Exponential Moving Average, of $3.03, said SKCharting’s Dixit. 

“Weakness below the zone will meet the next support at the 100-day SMA of $2.81,” Dixit added. “Any recovery will need to clear through $3.17 to reach $3.25 and $3.31.”

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

Commodities

Labor dispute stops Canadian canola oil, forestry exports from West Coast

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By Ed White

(Reuters) – Canada’s exports of canola oil and forest products from West Coast ports have halted due to a labor dispute, producers said on Thursday.

The stoppage, which started on Monday (NASDAQ:), involves limited strike action by the longshore foremen and a full lockout of Local 514 of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union by the B.C. Maritime Employers Association.

While bulk grain shipments are exempt from the British Columbia action, canola oil and forestry products are not covered by that federal labor code provision and are not being loaded onto ships at Pacific ports.

Based on the market price of canola oil, each day without shipments represents C$4 million in lost revenue, said Chris Vervaet, the executive director of the Canadian Oilseed Processors Association, which says it represents about 95% of Canada’s canola and soybean crush capacity.

“We really implore the government to get involved and really help both sides to a resolution.”

Federal Labor Minister Steven MacKinnon has said both sides have a responsibility to reach an agreement. On Thursday he criticized the lack of apparent progress between the union and employers as well as a smaller shutdown affecting some container traffic at the Port of Montreal.

“Both sets of talks are progressing at an insufficient pace, indicating a concerning absence of urgency from the parties involved,” said MacKinnon in a post on social media platform X.

Vervaet said Canada exports about one million metric tons of canola oil through the Port of Vancouver yearly.

Canada is the world’s top exporter of the oilseed, and canola oil is the most valuable part of the crop.

© Reuters. International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 members and supporters march to the Port of Vancouver amid a labour dispute, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada November 8, 2024. REUTERS/Jennifer Gauthier

The Forest Products Association of Canada also called for federal government intervention.

Wood, pulp, paper and byproduct shipments by the organization’s members make up about 17% of Vancouver’s container exports and 14% of Montreal’s.

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Commodities

Oil slips as investors digest US election fallout

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By Alex Lawler

LONDON (Reuters) – Oil slipped on Thursday, extending a sell-off triggered by the U.S. presidential election, as a strong dollar and lower crude imports in China outweighed supply risks from a Trump presidency and output cuts caused by Hurricane Rafael.

Donald Trump’s election win initially triggered a sell-off that pushed oil down more than $2 as the dollar rallied. But crude prices later pared losses to settle at a less than 1% decline by the end of Wednesday’s session.

futures fell 63 cents, or 0.8%, to $74.29 a barrel by 1253 GMT on Thursday. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude lost 73 cents, or 1%, to $70.96.

Downside factors include a strong dollar and sluggish demand, while upside pressures come from potentially increased sanctions on Iran and Venezuela under Trump, as well as conflict in the Middle East, said Saxo Bank analyst Ole Hansen.

“Some of these potential drivers will have no impact in the foreseeable future, but they all add up to the current narrative leading to rangebound trading,” he said.

“Absent any major geopolitical escalation, the short-term outlook leans toward downside risk in my opinion.”

The dollar held near four-month highs on Thursday as investors prepared for several central bank decisions, including from the U.S. Federal Reserve. A strong dollar makes oil more expensive for other currency holders and tends to weigh on prices.

“Historically, Trump’s policies have been pro-business, which likely supports overall economic growth and increases demand for fuel,” said Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market analyst at Phillip Nova. “However, any interference in the Fed’s easing policies could lead to further challenges for the oil market.”

Further downward pressure came from data showing that crude oil imports in China fell 9% in October – the sixth consecutive month showing a year-on-year decline – as well as from a rise in inventories.

Trump is expected to reimpose his “maximum pressure policy” of sanctions on Iranian oil exports. That could cut supply by as much as 1 million barrels per day (bpd), according to Energy Aspects estimates.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A pump jack operates in an oil field in Midland, Texas U.S. August 22, 2018. Picture taken August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo

In his first term, Trump also put in place harsher sanctions on Venezuelan oil. Those measures were briefly rolled back by the Biden administration but later reinstated.

Actual, rather than feared, supply cuts also lent support. In the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, about 17% of crude output or 304,418 bpd has been shut because of Hurricane Rafael, the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement said.

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Commodity prices fall after Donald Trump elected US President

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By Naveen Thukral, Emily Chow and Nina Chestney

SINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters) -Commodities from oil and gas to metals and grains dropped on Wednesday as the dollar rallied and victory for Republican Donald Trump in the U.S. presidential election stoked concerns about tariffs and economic growth.

Trump recaptured the White House by securing more than the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the presidency, following a campaign of dark rhetoric that deepened the polarization in the country.

Oil prices fell by more than 1% on pressure from the U.S. dollar rally, which was set for its biggest one-day rise since March 2023 against major peers. [USD/]

Investors believe Trump’s presidency will bolster the dollar as interest rates may need to remain high to combat inflation that would stem from new tariffs.

A stronger U.S. dollar makes greenback-denominated commodities such as oil more expensive for holders of other currencies.

Precious metals also fell, with gold sliding to a near three-week low, while lost more than 2%, making it the worst performer of the base metals complex.

“Gold will be torn between the risk of rising inflation, potentially slowing the pace of U.S. rate cuts, as tariffs are rolled out and continued demand for safe haven assets,” Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said.

Commodity prices started to fall overnight as traders started to price in the likelihood of a Trump win.

“This scenario is expected to bring about the promised tariffs on imported goods, particularly targeting China, potentially triggering a new wave of trade tensions and economic disruptions,” Hansen added.

However, Trump could renew sanctions on Iran and Venezuela, removing oil barrels from the market, which would be bullish, said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo. Iran exports about 1.3 million barrels per day.

Benchmark European gas prices also fell by nearly 3% amid concerns about gas supplies and Trump’s stance on the Middle East conflict and Russia-Ukraine war.

China’s industrial metals and steel industries could face headwinds as Trump has pledged to impose blanket 60% tariffs on Chinese goods to boost U.S. manufacturing.

“China’s steel prices will undertake more downward pressure if Trump wins the election, and domestic steelmakers may face even more severe losses,” said Ge Xin, deputy director at Lange Steel Research Centre. 

“This is because Trump will be more aggressive in terms of measures against China.”

The copper market was pricing in the possible roll-back of U.S. electrification initiatives, including subsidies for electric vehicles, which would dampen demand.

Agricultural commodities were also hit, with soybean futures in particular trading lower. Wheat and corn were seen as less exposed to renewed trade tensions with China.

A stronger dollar makes U.S. grain more expensive overseas, while tariffs proposed by Trump could disrupt U.S. agricultural trade, with soybeans particularly reliant on sales to leading importer China.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Soybean plants begin to show signs of growth at Mark Tuttle's soy farm in Somonauk, Illinois, U.S., May 30, 2024.  REUTERS/Jim Vondruska/File Photo

There are also fears that China could respond with retaliatory measures, potentially reducing U.S. exports of key crops and creating downward pressure on prices.

Shares in European clean energy companies also fell as Trump has vowed to scrap offshore wind projects through an executive order on his first day in office.

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