Counting On Oil Rally Pre-Fed? Don’t Hold Your Breath

 | Jul 30, 2019 06:01

It’s supposed to be the week when assets from stocks to commodities get supercharged from “rate cut excitement”.

Yet, it certainly doesn’t feel that way with oil.

Demand worries are continuing to haunt black gold despite prospects of the first U.S. rate cut in a decade that could be a boon for commodities.

In Monday’s session, crude oil futures began the day weaker as Japan forecast weaker economic growth in a sign of greater fallout from the U.S.-China trade war. Oil bulls also took a hit, initially, from an easing of geopolitical tensions over Iran, as the Islamic Republic sat in cordial talks with Western powers over its nuclear future.

Both West Texas Intermediate crude and London’s Brent, the benchmark for oil outside of the U.S., eventually settled Monday’s session higher as traders rallied around the notion of at least a quarter percentage point cut from the Federal Reserve this week.

Tuesday’s trading also opened in relatively positive conditions in Asia.

h3 Nagging Feeling That Oil Could End Week Lower/h3

But there remains a nagging feeling that whatever gains oil tacks on could be dwindling by the end of the week, as demand worries continue to tug at the market’s underbelly.

Phil Flynn, senior energy analyst at Chicago’s Price Futures Group and a well-known oil bull, put it most succinctly during Monday’s early trading in New York, when the market was down:

“Oil is stuck on the backburner as the markets all wait for the outcome of the U.S.-China trade talks.”

“And, of course, the Fed decision is looming large, where it is widely expected that the Fed will cut rates for the first time since 2008.”

“All that macro-economic anticipation is reminding us that oil prices are focused on global growth ideas for market direction.”

Expectations that the Fed will cut rates by at least 25 basis points at its July 30-31 policy meeting powered a solid run across markets this month, helping gold futures hit six-year highs above $1,450 at one point.