Oil down 6% in biggest loss in a year; Gasoline build hijacks OPEC show

Oil down 6% in biggest loss in a year; Gasoline build hijacks OPEC show

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Investing.com - The oil trade seems to have woken up to the fact that there’s something bigger after all than OPEC: The economy.

Crude prices fell almost 6% on Wednesday for the biggest one-day sell-off since September 2022. The plunge came after a rally that began in June, founded more on OPEC production maneuvers designed to create maximum fear about short supply than demand sustained by global economic soundness. Crude prices ultimately rose almost 30% for the third quarter.

On Wednesday, the floor under that rally gave way like it hadn’t before in those three months.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, crude for delivery in November traded settled down $5.01, or 5.6%, at $84.22 per barrel. The US crude benchmark hit a one-month low of $84.17 earlier and was down 7% on the week.

“If WTI at $84 doesn’t attract buyers, the decline can extend to $81,” said Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at SKCharting.com.

As WTI settled, London-traded Brent for the most-active December contract was down $5.11, or 5.6%, to $85.91 by 14:30 ET (18:30 GMT), after a one-month low at $85.77. The global crude benchmark was down 10% on the week.

Wednesday’s collapse in oil prices came amid several drivers.

The primary one was concern about the health of the global economy, particularly Europe’s most vulnerable versus the relatively resilient US economy.

But the United States has its own problems too with the energy-price driven inflation of the past three months prodding the Federal Reserve to stay hawkish on interest rates for the foreseeable future. That has pushed the dollar to 11-month highs, further weakening the finances of other nations and international demand for crude and other commodities denominated in the US currency.

OPEC show "hijacked" by economy, US inventory data

The other driver for Wednesday’s spectacular price drop in crude was the seasonal slide in U.S. demand — a fact that seemed lost on those betting on the oil rally of the past quarter to continue indefinitely on OPEC market manipulation and promises.

“Today’s oil prices, if anything, show how insanely bulls have been pushing this market up for months, oblivious to the fact that there’s something greater than OPEC — the economy, you know,” said John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital.

OPEC and its allies at a meeting on Wednesday reaffirmed the joint Saudi-Russian pledge to continue removing a total of at least 1.3 million barrels a day from the daily production of the two countries until the end of the year.