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Oil surges to a five month high
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OPEC+ cuts and geopolitical tensions support prices
Over the past month, crude oil prices experienced a strong surge, with
brent crude futures reaching $87.70 per barrel for the first time since
October 2023. The remarkable rally which started in December 2023 has been
influenced by a number of factors, ranging from geopolitical tensions, the
extension of OPEC+ output cuts, the tightening of physical market, and
increased demand from the largest oil consuming countries.
Geopolitical tensions and supply constraints
The recent escalation of geo-political tensions, particularly the Ukrainian
drone attacks on Russian oil infrastructure, the continued unrest in the
Middle East, and extended OPEC+ supply cuts have fuelled apprehensions over
potential disruptions to global oil supplies and have been supporting crude
prices. While these tensions have not yet led to significant supply
disruptions, they have contributed to market uncertainty. Despite headwind
winds such as a robust U.S. production and a challenging economic outlook
for the biggest oil consumer – China, crude prices have been gradually
rising in the first quarter of 2024.
OPEC+ production cuts and tightening of physical markets
The decision by OPEC+ members to extend production cuts until June 2024,
with indications of further extensions, has played a pivotal role in
tightening physical markets and supporting oil prices. The move signals a
commitment to balancing supply and demand, contributing to sustained
tightness in physical markets throughout the second quarter of 2024.
Improving economic outlook and rising demand
The upwardly revised outlooks for the global economy, coupled with
improving demand projections, have increased optimism among crude traders.
Increased mobility in major oil-consuming regions, such as China and Europe,
alongside robust household consumption in India, has driven up oil demand.
Despite concerns over economic growth in some regions, overall demand
remains resilient, contributing to a net supply deficit in physical
markets.
Projection for crude oil demand and prices
The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects a modest uptick in crude oil
demand by 1.1 mbpd in 2024, compared to a 1.9 mbpd growth in 2023. The
growth is primarily driven by emerging markets like India and China. The
outlook for crude prices remains broadly balanced in 2024, with the
possibility of brent crude futures rising to $90.00 per barrel in the short
term. Escalating geopolitical tensions and the ongoing OPEC+ output cuts are
likely to continue to exert upward pressure on prices.
Source: TradingView
Technical analysis
Oil has been trading sideways from the onset of 2024, with the price of
brent fluctuating within the boundaries of a bullish ascending triangle.
Last week’s price action decisively broke above its key resistance of
$84.80 per barrel, showing that a new uptrend has started and suggesting
that higher price levels are likely to unfold in the short-term. The
potential upside price target based on the breakout is in the range between
$90.00 and $95.00 per barrel.
Conclusion
The surge in crude oil prices over the past three months reflects a complex
interplay of geopolitical, supply-demand, and economic factors.
Geo-political uncertainty and extended supply cuts by OPEC+ have buoyed
prices, despite the challenging economic outlook in China and the robust
non-OPEC supply growth.
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Brent Oil ETC
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ETPs.
Footnotes:
- International Energy Agency