Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - Was last week’s U.S. crude build a one-off thing, or the start of a trend?

That would be the foremost question on traders’ minds as OPEC vows to restore sentiment in a market that briefly plunged to 7-month lows and into bear territory this week on heightened trade war worry.

A Bloomberg report citing an anonymous Saudi source as saying the kingdom wouldn’t tolerate a price crash like in 2018, with detail on the further squeeze Riyadh will be applying to its production to enhance OPEC export cuts, led to a remarkable crude price recovery in the last two days of this week. More startling was that the market completely ignored the latest dire warning on falling global oil demand from the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA).

But as a new week looms, the market’s attention is expected to revert to latest balances on U.S. crude, gasoline and distillates. In the previous week to Aug 2, those numbers weren’t pretty at all, with inventory builds across the board. The dataset from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) for the week ended Aug 2 was the catalyst to the double-digit losses initially seen in crude this week, before a partial rebound on Thursday and Friday.

While no one knows what the EIA will announce for stockpiles in the current week to Aug 9, what’s apparent is that the bulls have stanched the market’s bleeding for now – notwithstanding new trade war tremors that could send crude prices into another tailspin before the inventory data release on Aug 14.

Gold has also slowed after a strident march into $1,500 territory, with the spot price of the yellow metal slipping under that key marker on Friday, as longs await news of further trouble in the global economy or signs of impending Federal Reserve easing.

Energy Review

Bloomberg reported that Saudi Arabia plans to keep its crude exports at below 7 million barrels per day from September.

In good times, the kingdom can produce up to 10.3 million bpd. Now certainly isn’t one of those times.

To achieve lower exports, Riyadh’s state-run Saudi Arabian Oil Co., known as Aramco, will cut customer allocations across all regions by a total of 700,000 bpd in September.

For North American customers, the kingdom will send about 300,000 bpd less than they nominated for oil scheduled to load in September.

Reductions to European buyers will be larger and there will also be modest cuts to Asian buyers, although no specifics were available as yet.

As OPEC’s biggest producer, the Saudis are also banking on the rest of the cartel to take its lead in slashing total supply beyond the 1.2 million bpd that the group had committed to through March 2020.