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Concerns over weak Chinese demand could be temporary.
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Extension of supply cuts by OPEC+ and geo-political tension in the
Middle East is likely to support prices.
Oil demand from China slows down
Oil prices have been trading in a narrow range over the past month as
concerns of slowing crude demand in China neutralises the tighter supply
outlook for 2024. Last Thursday data from China – the world’s biggest oil
importer have shown that oil imports for January and February 2024 have
risen compared to the same period of 2023; however, the data is lower than
December, displaying a trend of weakening purchases.
OPEC+ extends production cuts
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies
have agreed last Sunday to extend voluntary oil output cuts of 2.2 million
barrels per day into the second quarter. The decision of the oil cartel to
tighten oil supply gives additional support to crude prices as concerns
over global growth demand for oil and rising output outside the group,
especially in the U.S. have been exerting downward pressure on prices.
Uncertainty over interest rate cuts from central banks
Fears of weak demand were exacerbated by the uncertainty over the path of
U.S. interest rates, as non-farm payrolls data last Friday indicated that
the U.S. labour market remains resilient. U.S. job growth rose by 275,000
new nonfarm payrolls in February, according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, beating expectations of a 200,000 rise.
The unemployment rate also rose, and wage growth decelerated, showing that
the U.S. economy might be slowing which supports the soft landing narrative
and increased the probability of a June rate cut. Monetary policy is an
important factor weighing on oil prices as lower interest rates could boost
economic growth and increase oil demand.
Source: TradingView
IEA forecasts supply deficit for the rest of 2024
The latest report from the International Energy Agency (IEA) suggests the
oil market would be tight for the rest of the year. The agency revised its
forecast higher by 110,000 bpd from its prior outlook. IEA now anticipates
oil demand growth to decline to 1.3 million bpd in 2024 in comparison to
2.3 million bpd growth in 2023.
The IEA lowered its 2024 supply forecast expecting oil supply to rise by
800K bpd to 102.9 million bpd in 2023. The upwardly revised demand growth
and the lowered supply growth prognosis suggests a tighter market for the
rest of the year.
Technical analysis
Oil prices have been consistently trading higher since mid-December 2023
advancing from a low of $67.71 to a $81.62 intra-day high on Thursday.
Thursday’s price action decisively broke above a multiple key resistance of
$79.77 confirming a large ascending triangle.
The pattern has bullish implications and points to higher price levels in
the months ahead. The initial upside price target for WTI crude is $85.00;
however, over the medium-term levels to $89.00 appear easily achievable.