(Bloomberg) — Oil fell for a third day on a soft demand outlook in China, a stronger US dollar, and concerns the market may flip to oversupply.
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Brent (BZ=F) dropped below $72 after shedding 5% over two sessions, with West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) above $67. China’s latest measures to kick-start its economy stopped short of direct stimulus, and inflation remains weak. A gauge of the dollar hit a one-year high as investors adjust to Donald Trump’s electoral victory, making crude oil more expensive for most buyers.
Crude has traded in a relatively narrow range since the middle of last month as traders tracked tensions in the Middle East, the race for the White House, and OPEC+ decisions on output. The outlook remains weak, with global supply expected to outpace demand next year. OPEC’s monthly market report, due for release later Tuesday, will shed more light on the outlook for balances.
Timespreads point to a less-tight market. Although most gauges are holding in a backwardated structure — with nearby contracts at a premium to longer-dated ones — spreads have narrowed. The gap between Brent’s two nearest contracts was 17 cents a barrel in backwardation, compared with 44 cents about a month ago.
“Sentiment in the oil market remains largely bearish: US dollar strength, demand concerns, and expectations of a loosening oil balance are keeping pressure on prices,” said Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy at ING Groep NV. “In order to change the outlook for next year, we either have to see OPEC+ delay the return of barrels through much of 2025, or the US enforcing sanctions against Iran effectively.”
After the analysis from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, the US will release its short-term outlook on Wednesday, followed by the International Energy Agency’s view the day after. OPEC revised demand forecasts lower in its report last month.
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