Houston Chronicle Sunday

Oil posts July gain supported by OPEC cuts, weak dollar

U.S. crude inventorie­s, currently at their lowest since April, show signs of shrinking

- By Andres Guerra Luz

Oil posted a gain in July, boosted by a steadily weakening dollar and OPEC’s restraint on production.

Deep crude output curbs by the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies have helped futures rebound from their plunge below zero in April, yet the unpreceden­ted cuts are set to ease in a matter of days. Still, U.S. crude inventorie­s have showed signs of shrinking and are currently sitting at the lowest since April. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is also set for its worst monthly performanc­e since January 2018, bolstering the appeal of commoditie­s traded in the U.S. currency.

“There was a pretty significan­t drop in crude oil invent o businesses. ry and OPEC and some of the refiners are doing a good job of rebalancin­g the market,” said Phil Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures LLC in Chicago. “The decline in the dollar has also helped support crude oil.”

Yet, futures have remained trapped in a tight trading range with rallies limited by the coronaviru­s pandemic ravaging demand. Exxon Mobil Corp. said it only sees an oil consumptio­n recovery well into 2021.

Adding to troubling signs over an economic recovery,

U.S. consumer sentiment extended its slide in late July as the virus led to renewed business closings and layoffs. Exxon and Chevron Corp. posted the worst losses in a generation as the virus combined with a global crude glut battered their Meanwhile, U.S. shale producers are also signaling supply will come roaring back over the next few months with futures near $40 a barrel. ConocoPhil­lips

said this week that it will restart most wells that were shut by September.

“The big worry is that we’re about to go into August and this is the last two weeks or so of potential driving vacations,” said Bill O’Grady, executive vice president at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis. “You’ve had depressed demand for gasoline and it’s probably not going to get a whole lot better from here.”

OPEC+ plans to return about 1.5 million barrels a day to the market next month after cutting global supply by roughly 10 percent when demand plunged.

Pointing to further weakness, gasoline refining margins are at the lowest seasonal level in years, showing refiner profitabil­ity is facing pressure as the pandemic keeps Americans at home and off the road.

Whether or not demand will improve in the fall will depend on how much the resurgence of COVID-19 impacts commutes to work and children returning to school, with driving to and from school accounting for about 5 percent of gasoline demand, Phillips 66 estimated.

 ?? Tamir Kalifa / NYT ?? A drill rig in the Permian Basin near Stanton on April 24. Oil prices have recovered from their plunge below zero in April.
Tamir Kalifa / NYT A drill rig in the Permian Basin near Stanton on April 24. Oil prices have recovered from their plunge below zero in April.

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