Commodities Week Ahead: Oil Battles Oversupply Demons; Gold Steady At $1,700

 | Apr 27, 2020 04:25

Everything in oil this week may depend on how quickly things fall—and by that, I mean the open interest in U.S. crude’s front-month, production reported by the EIA, capex cuts announced by oil majors Exxon (NYSE:XOM), BP (NYSE:BP) and Shell (NYSE:RDSa) and the oil rig count from Baker Hughes. 

In gold’s case, the race is still on for a test of $1,800. But volatility could keep it at the lower end of $1,700 as the central banks that matter—the Fed, ECB and BoJ—hold meetings this week. Thursday's unemployment claims will also determine if we’re continuing to flatten the curve on job losses; if so, gold could see mixed signals from an equally strong Dow and the dollar. 

“I am maintaining my overall oil view and short-term bias at cautiously bearish as the market moves its focus to external issues around the world that could have a negative impact on global oil demand growth,” Dominick Chirichella at the Energy Management Institute in New York said as U.S. West Texas Intermediate plunged 9% and London’s Brent 3% in Monday’s early trade in Asia.

h2 Shrinking Front-Month Liquidity in U.S. Crude /h2

WTI is being pressured by development that could set it up for another round of sub-zero prices.