The Fiji Times

Oil futures sink by $1/bbl

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NEW YORK - Oil futures sank by $1 a barrel on Wednesday as surging US crude inventorie­s pushed down prices and a possible security threat to the US that might dampen oil demand in the world’s largest economy.

Brent crude futures settled at $81.60 a barrel, shedding, $1.17, or 1.4 per cent. US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude futures settled at $76.64 a barrel, losing $1.23, or a 1.6 per cent.

US crude inventorie­s jumped by 12 million barrels to 439.5 million barrels last week, the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion said, far exceeding analysts’ expectatio­ns in a Reuters poll for a 2.6 million-barrel rise as refining dropped to its lowest levels since December 2022.

“The refinery utilisatio­n rate is a pseudo disaster, down four to five weeks in a row at the end of winter” said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho, adding that refiners have kept activity slow even after emerging from a deep freeze that hampered operations last month.

Refinery crude runs last week fell by 298,000 barrels per day to 14.5 million bpd and refinery utilisatio­n rates decreased by 1.8 percentage points to 80.6 per cent of total capacity, both the lowest levels since Winter Storm Elliott similarly knocked scores of refineries offline in December 2022.

Meanwhile, the US Congress intelligen­ce chair warned of a ‘serious national security threat’, without providing further details, scaring some oil investors.

“At the risk of sounding flip, war and/or terror events outside the oil producing regions are bearish for oil prices due to the expected hit to demand,” John Kilduff, partner at New York-based Again Capital.

Prices drew some support from a monthly report on Tuesday from the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) that said global oil demand will rise by 2.25 million bpd in 2024 and by 1.85 million bpd in 2025. Both forecasts were unchanged from last month.

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