Crude Oil Futures Dip on Stronger Dollar

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crude oil

Crude oil futures inched lower during mid-morning trade in Asia Feb. 17, coming under pressure from a stronger US dollar and a technical correction in the overbought oil markets, as well as rising expectations of easing supply curbs from OPEC+ at its March 3 meeting, says an article published in S&P Global.

What Data Suggests 

At 10:37 am Singapore time (0237 GMT), the ICE Brent April contract was down 21 cents/b (0.33%) from the Feb. 16 settle at $63.14/b, while the March NYMEX light sweet crude contract was 20 cents/b (0.33%) lower at $59.85b.

The US dollar strengthened on the back of higher US 10-year Treasury bond yields, which jumped amid inflationary expectations as the global economy continues its path of recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, causing weakness in oil markets.

Stephen Innes Comments

“Oil is trading lower via a stronger US dollar, which is gaining a head of steam with US yields ripping higher, and both are stepping up to challenge the bullish reflation momentum,” said Stephen Innes, chief global strategist at Axi, in Feb. 17 note.

Technical correction in the oil markets, where speculative trading had caused an extended long position and left the market overdue for a consolidation, also contributed to the decline, according to analysts.

Jeffery Halley Comments

“Given the scale of the rally in oil, the current fall in prices does not reflect the rally losing its steam, but merely a technical correction in an extremely overbought market. Oil can only fall so far, even if the drop in prices is sharp; I expect it to be short-lived,” Jeffery Halley, senior market analyst at OANDA, told S&P Global Platts Feb. 17.

No Additional Support

Meanwhile, severe cold weather in parts of the US, including Texas, continues to disrupt shale oil production and refining activities. However, given the temporary nature of the weather disruption and the offsetting effect of the reduced supply from oil producers and demand from oil refiners in the region, the supply disruptions are no longer providing additional support to oil prices.

Even without the boost from supply disruptions in North America, oil markets are by-and-large well supported, with a strong demand recovery outlook amid the receding pandemic and expectations of additional fiscal relief from the US, along with supply curtailments from OPEC+ and Saudi Arabia’s additional 1 million b/d production curbs.

Risk of OPEC+ Unwinding

However, analysts cautioned that strong oil prices are heightening the risk of OPEC+ unwinding production cuts at a faster pace, which may reduce the supply tightness that is contributing to the supported market.

“There are suggestions that the group could ease output cuts slightly,” ING Economics analysts said in a Feb. 17 note, adding that much also depends on how quickly Saudi Arabia rolls back its voluntary production cuts.

US Shale Producers Ramping

“Strong oil prices increase the possibility of US shale producers ramping up activities, which they can do fairly quickly, taking away some of the market share from OPEC+ producers. As such, the odds of OPEC+ making adjustments production cuts are rising quickly,” Halley said.

Market participants will look to the weekly inventory reports by the American Petroleum Institute and the US Energy Information Administration, due later Feb. 17 and Feb. 18 respectively, for fresh pricing cues.

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Source : S&P Global