Commodities
Oil: Up 2nd week on Mideast troubles, but downside risks growing too
© Reuters.
Investing.com – The scare projected to the oil trade by the Israel-Hamas war pushed crude prices up for a second straight week, though the absence of any real disruption to barrels coming out of the Middle East is also giving rise to intraday volatility.
Both US crude and its UK peer Brent jumped almost 2% at one point on Friday before giving all that back and settling the day in the negative. Gains in recent sessions, however, kept the two benchmarks in the black for the week.
New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or , crude for delivery in December settled Friday’s trade down 29 cents, or 0.3%, at $88.08 per barrel. December WTI earlier hit a session high of $89.85. For the week, the US crude benchmark rose 2%, adding to the prior week’s gain of around 6%.
London-traded crude for the most-active December contract finished Wednesday’s session at $92.16, down 22 cents, or 0.2%. For the week, the global crude benchmark showed a gain of 1.4% after the prior week’s gain of 7,.5%.
Many on Wall Street seem to think crude prices should be higher anyway due the relative proximity of the showdown in Gaza to some of the biggest oil producers, such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iraq and Kuwait.
While Israel and Palestine themselves barely register in the global oil trade, the Strait of Hormuz straddling them is a key chokepoint for the movement of crude, where a fifth of all oil passes through its waters.
Also, the almost daily saber-rattling against Israel by avowed Hamas supporter and fifth largest oil producer Iran — and concerns of reprisals against Tehran by the Israelis and their main ally, the United States — has added to concerns that something untoward might happen soon.
“The potential for the war between Israel and Gaza to become more widespread is making traders nervous and adding a significant risk premium to oil prices at a time when the market is already extremely tight,” said Ed Moya, analyst at online trading platform OANDA.
“Traders are wary of weekend events triggering a shock price move on the open which likely explains the moves we’re seeing today,” Moya said, referencing Friday’s highs that came after mid-week explosion at a Gaza hospital that reportedly killed hundreds of people.
Yet, some oil traders see the conflict for what it is — a major political event that has not shown any demonstrable risk thus far to the crude trade.
“My heart goes out to every life that’s been lost in this senseless war, and I really mean that,” said John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital. “But to assign a daily war premium to oil because of this is pure BS.”
The weekly rise in oil prices wasn’t without merit.
US stockpile drop, Fed boost vs Venezuela sanctions easing
US stockpiles of , and all showed notable reductions last week in a weekly inventory update issued by the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell added to the upside momentum in not just oil but most commodities on Thursday with comments that seemed to reinforce the central bank’s hesitancy in pushing interest rates any higher than where they already were.
But there were also downsides to the sentiment in oil this week, with the United States granting Venezuela a six-month waiver from the sanctions imposed on the South American’s oil trade, after the Maduro government there agreed in principle to hold free and fair elections in 2024.
The deal is not expected to quickly expand Venezuela’s oil output but could boost profits by returning some foreign companies to its oilfields and providing its crude to a wider set of cash-paying customers, experts said.
“The general reaction in the market to the Venezuela deal is “oh, it’s nothing in the grand scheme of oil’,” said Kilduff of Again Capital. “But at least, it’s a real incentive for the oil industry in terms of production versus the imaginative impact thus far from the Israel-Hamas war.”
(Peter and Ambar Warrick contributed to this article)
Commodities
Energy, crude oil prices outlook for 2025, according to Raymond James
Investing.com — Raymond James analysts provided a cautious outlook for the energy sector in 2025.
Despite energy’s underperformance over the past two years, the midstream group emerged as a bright spot in 2024, with the Alerian/AMNA index surging 37% and Raymond (NS:) James’ midstream coverage group up 41%.
Geopolitical tensions, such as the ongoing conflict in Ukraine and recent Middle East confrontations, have had little impact on oil market fundamentals.
“Oil price volatility continues to be driven by rather old-fashioned supply and demand factors,” the analysts note.
They highlight mixed messages from OPEC and weak demand from China as key contributors to the current market uncertainty. Additionally, the strength of the U.S. dollar, particularly around the U.S. election, is also exerting downward pressure on oil prices.
Looking ahead, Raymond James forecasts West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude to average $70 per barrel in 2025, slightly above the futures strip, with carrying a $5 premium.
In contrast, U.S. prices are expected to average $4 per Mcf, significantly higher than current futures prices.
A notable theme for 2025 is the continued impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on the energy sector.
“AI remains the number-one story in the energy sector,” Raymond James states. “Accommodating this incremental demand will take an all-of-the-above strategy: gas, renewables, and – in certain circumstances, and with very long lead times – nuclear as well.”
“The energy sector currently sits at only ~3% of S&P market cap, but investor sentiment still remains above pre-COVID levels. That being said, near-term uncertainty regarding the commodities (namely oil) has left investors with little conviction at the moment,” concluded the firm.
Commodities
Oil prices rally 3% as US hits Russian oil with tougher sanctions
By Shariq Khan
New York (Reuters) -Oil prices rallied nearly 3% to their highest in three months on Friday as traders braced for supply disruptions from the broadest U.S. sanctions package targeting Russian oil and gas revenue.
President Joe Biden’s administration imposed fresh sanctions targeting Russian oil producers, tankers, intermediaries, traders and ports, aiming to hit every stage of Moscow’s oil production and distribution chains.
futures settled at $79.76 a barrel, up $2.84, or 3.7%, after crossing $80 a barrel for the first time since Oct.7.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose $2.65, or 3.6%, to settle at $76.57 per barrel, also a three-month high.
At their session high, both contracts were up more than 4% after traders in Europe and Asia circulated an unverified document detailing the sanctions.
Sources in Russian oil trade and Indian refining told Reuters the sanctions will severely disrupt Russian oil exports to its major buyers India and China.
“India and China (are) scrambling right now to find alternatives,” Anas Alhajji, managing partner at Energy Outlook Advisors, said in a video posted to social network X.
The sanctions will cut Russian oil export volumes and make them more expensive, UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said.
Their timing, just a few days before President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration, makes it likely that Trump will keep the sanctions in place and use them as a negotiating tool for a Ukraine peace treaty, Staunovo added.
Oil prices were also buoyed as extreme cold in the U.S. and Europe has lifted demand for , Alex Hodes, analyst at brokerage firm StoneX, said.
“We have several customers in the New York Harbor that have been seeing an uptick in heating oil demand,” Hodes said. “We have seen a bid in other heating fuels as well,” he added.
U.S. ultra-low sulfur diesel futures, previously called the heating oil contract, rose 5.1% to settle at $105.07 per barrel, the highest since July.
“We anticipate a significant year-over-year increase in global oil demand of 1.6 million barrels a day in the first quarter of 2025, primarily boosted by … demand for heating oil, kerosene and LPG,” JPMorgan analysts said in a note on Friday.
Commodities
Precious metals, energy sectors seen gaining at least 10% in 2025 – Wells Fargo
Investing.com – Macroeconomic challenges facing commodities in the first three quarters of 2024 have reversed and become tailwinds entering the new year, according to analysts at Wells Fargo (NYSE:).
Elevated interest rates and broader economic uncertainties weighed on commodity prices over the January-to-September period last year, although that trend largely turned around in the fourth quarter, the analysts led by Mason Mendez said in a note to clients published on Monday.
Commodities in general delivered a modest performance in 2024, they said, with the Bloomberg Commodity Total (EPA:) Return Index clocking a 4.5% year-to-date increase as of Dec. 26.
“While supply conditions remained supportive of higher prices, commodity demand was held back by global economic headwinds,” the analysts wrote.
That tepid demand is seen improving in 2025, becoming a possible spark that ignites an uptick in commodity prices, they added. However, they flagged that the supply side “should not be forgotten.”
“After two years of lackluster commodity prices, many commodity producers have slowed production growth,” the analysts said. “This could become a particularly acute point in 2025 in the event that demand recovers at a stronger pace than most expect.”
They noted that new commodity output often lags demand “by months, and sometimes years.”
Among individual sectors, the analysts said they are most keen on precious metals, such as , and energy, with both expected to gain at least 10% in 2025. This would exceed the return the analysts expect from the mid-point of their 250-270 target range range for the broader Bloomberg Commodity Total Return Index.
Gold, in particular, experienced a turbulent end to 2024 due in part to caution around more Federal Reserve interest rate cuts, which contributed to an uptick in nominal and real bond yields that dented the appeal of non-yielding bullion.
Still, the yellow metal jumped by around 27% annually to close out the year at $2,625 per troy ounce, and the prospect of more Fed rate reductions — albeit at a possibly slower pace — could continue to boost its appeal, the Wells Fargo analysts said.
They set a target range for gold prices at $2,700-$2,800 per troy ounce this year.
Energy, meanwhile, is tipped to benefit from greater demand as global economic conditions improve, the analysts forecast. is tipped to be between $85-$95 a barrel, while crude is seen at $90-$100 per barrel. Oil prices dropped by around 3% in 2024, weighed down partly by a sluggish post-pandemic recovery in global demand.
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