Oil still unstable with continuous second wave fears

Oil was mixed on Friday morning in Asia, giving up some of its gains from the previous session.

Brent oil futures dropped 0.29% to $31.30 by 9:35 PM ET (2:35 AM GMT) and WTI futures clawed back its earlier losses to gain 0.15% to $27.60.

WTI futures surged 8.98% and Brent oil futures gained 6.65% during the last session.

Investors were skittish as the US Labor Department said overnight that 2.98 million Americans claimed unemployment benefits for the week ended May 9, down from the previous week’s 3.18 figure and the sixth straight reported weekly drop.

Over 36 million Americans have lost their jobs since the end of March.

“Gasoline demand correlates pretty well with the employment level, and it’s hard to see gasoline demand come back much more than it already has,” John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLC, told CNBC.

The black liquid continues to wrestle with its oversupply dilemma as countries such as China, Korea and Hong Kong see a second wave of Covid-19 cases, threatening to send demand down again while storage tanks fill up.

<a href=’https://staging.theenergyyear.com/companies-institutions/opec/’>OPEC said on Wednesday it expected global oil demand to shrink by 9.07 million bpd in 2020, with the current quarter expected to see the steepest decline.

But despite the production cuts pledged by OPEC+, some American companies and a small group of countries led by Saudi Arabia, some investors worry that it will not be enough.

“While these supply and demand dynamics are certainly capable of boosting prices near term, a potential record level of global crude supply will remain as a force to be reckoned with,” Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch and Associates, said in a report.

Meanwhile, the US Commodities Futures Trading Commission sounded a warning to exchanges and brokerages on Thursday to prepare for volatility and possible negative pricing as the WTI futures June contract expires on May 19.

By Investing.com: https://www.investing.com/news/commodities-news/oilmixed-againwithcontinuoussecond-wavefears-2173004

Recent Posts

UK allows oil exploration in North Sea wind project zones

The UK's hydrocarbons regulator has awarded 31 new exploration licences in the country's North Sea waters, Reuters reported on Friday Read More

9 hours ago

ExxonMobil closes acquisition of Pioneer, creating Permian powerhouse

ExxonMobil announced the closing of its USD 60-billion acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources on Friday, a move that solidifies its… Read More

13 hours ago

BP-Eni joint venture Azule Energy enters Namibia’s Orange Basin

BP-Eni joint venture Azule Energy has entered a strategic farm-in agreement with Rhino Resources in Namibia's offshore Orange Basin, the… Read More

15 hours ago

Chariot starts gas drilling campaign in Morocco

Africa-focused energy group Chariot has spudded the RZK-1 exploration well on the Gaufrette prospect at the Loukos Onshore licence in… Read More

19 hours ago

Touchstone acquires Trinidad E&P player Trinity

Touchstone Exploration has acquired Trinidad-focused Trinity Exploration & Production in an all-shares deal, the Canadian upstream player said on Wednesday Read More

1 day ago

ExxonMobil “optimistic and pushing forward” with Mozambique’s Rovuma LNG

ExxonMobil is "optimistic and pushing forward" with the Rovuma LNG project in Mozambique and eyes an FID by the year's… Read More

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.