Commodities Week Ahead: China Could Cripple Saudi Oil Move; Gold Holds

 | Aug 12, 2019 07:41

The Saudis have sworn to rebalance oil prices, but it could take just another U.S. stockpile build or Chinese buying of Iranian crude to send the market into a tailspin.

Gold, meanwhile, remains within striking distance of new 2019 highs at above or just around the $1,500 territory, with longs awaiting news of further troubles in the global economy or another Federal Reserve easing.

Any sign of China cutting back on U.S. crude and ramping up on Iranian purchases instead could be the bane of oil bulls as weekly stockpiles could start surging again in the United States. Last week was a clear example of what a drop in exports could do to U.S. crude balances: A 710,000-barrel decline from the previous week’s exports contributed largely to a 2.4 million-barrel inventory build.

Dominick Chirichella, director of trading and risk at the Energy Management Institute in New York, succinctly summed up last week’s action in oil by noting that the powerful rebound of the last two days was the result of the market correcting some of the overdone worries on demand, even as recession fears from the U.S.-China trade war drove prices down on the week.

h3 Market Focused On Demand More Than Geopolitics/h3

In a note issued for Monday, Chirichella wrote:

“The battle that has been looming for months between the many geopolitical risks impacting supply versus the risk of a slowing of the global economy has seen the market mainly focused on the demand side of the battle.”