Roseland Oil & Gas issued the following announcement.
Oil rose toward $46 a barrel after shrugging off a massive increase in U.S. crude stockpiles on optimism that vaccine rollouts will lead to a swift improvement in global energy demand next year.
The Energy Information Administration reported a 15.2 million barrel jump in American oil inventories, the second-biggest on record. While prices dropped on the data, they retraced most of their losses with some support from a falling dollar to close down just 0.2% on Wednesday. A militant attack on the Khabbaz field in Iraq had aided crude earlier in the session.
Oil rose Thursday even as Asian stocks tracked Wall Street lower on the lack of U.S. stimulus. Canada became the latest country to approve a Covid-19 vaccine and Chicago said it will offer vaccines free of charge to all adult residents next year. Asian physical demand, meanwhile, looked set to remain strong for another month amid early buying by Chinese and Indian refiners.
Oil has fallen this week, but remains near a nine-month high, as the market holds out for vaccine deployments to spur the next leg of the demand recovery. While concerns about near-term consumption are still weighing on sentiment as governments reimpose restrictions, the oil futures curve is signaling investors are fairly comfortable about the outlook for next year.
The market is in a “fairly buoyant mood” as investors focus on the longer-term outlook due to vaccine rollouts, said Daniel Hynes, a senior commodity strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Sydney. “Risk appetite is improving and certainly commodity markets are caught up in that.”
Prices |
West Texas Intermediate for January delivery rose 0.2% to $45.60 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 7:44 a.m. in LondonBrent for February settlement increased 0.1% to $48.90 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange after closing little changed in the previous sessionCrude futures declined 0.8% to 282.6 yuan a barrel on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange after climbing 0.4% on Wednesday |
The EIA report also showed crude exports fell to the lowest since October 2018, helping bring the U.S. back to being a net petroleum importer for the first time since September. Meanwhile, distillate stockpiles, which had been declining at a fairly steady clip, rose the most since May as diesel demand fell.
Brent’s prompt timespread was 8 cents a barrel in backwardation, a bullish signal where near-dated contracts are more expensive than later-dated ones. The spread was 48 cents in contango at the end of October.
Other oil-market news |
The United Arab Emirates awarded oil-exploration rights to Occidental Petroleum Corp., moving quickly to expand output capacity just a week after the country clashed with its OPEC partners over production limits.Royal Dutch Shell Plc is shaking up its mighty in-house trading unit, with the retirement of Mark Quartermain as head of crude — a job widely seen as the most powerful in the global oil-trading industry.The Trump administration is preparing to issue a broad plan that keeps the door open for expanded oil drilling off the U.S. coast, including near Southern California, Alaska and Mid-Atlantic states. |