The Commodities Feed: Positive Economic Sentiment Boosts Prices, OPEC Oil Output Stable

Red Sea Shipping Crisis Continues Unabated: Extended Disruptions Forecasted Into 2024

The Commodities Feed: Positive economic sentiment helps to boost prices

The Fed’s decision to keep interest rate hikes on pause for a second consecutive time has bolstered economic sentiment and supported commodity prices, including energy and metals. Fresh mine closures have provided additional support to zinc, with prices climbing to around US$2,600/t yesterday.

 

Energy – OPEC oil output held stable

ICE Brent has been trading firm this morning on positive economic sentiment after the US Fed continued to pause interest rate hikes. The hawkish tone remains in the accompanying statement. Lower crude oil inventory in the US and Europe also continued to be supportive of crude oil prices.

Preliminary OPEC production numbers for October suggest a broadly stable output as the modest increases across most of its African members offset the declines elsewhere. According to a Bloomberg survey, OPEC output increased by 50Mbbls/d MoM to 28.1MMbbls/d last month. Nigeria led the gains, with their production rising by 60Mbbls/d to 1.5MMbbls/d followed by Venezuela (+30Mbbls/d), Congo (+20Mbbls/d) and Gabon (+20Mbbls/d). The output additions were partially offset by declining production in Iraq (-40Mbbls/d), Iran (-30Mbbls/d), Kuwait (-20Mbbls/d) and Libya (-20Mbbls/d).

The latest numbers from the EIA weekly inventory report show that US commercial crude oil inventories increased by 0.8MMbbls over the last week. Earlier, API reported an inventory build of 1.35MMbbls while the market expected a build of around 1MMbbls. Total crude oil inventory (excluding SPR) at around 421.9MMbbls remains about 5% below the five-year average at this point in the season. US crude oil production remained unchanged at 13.2MMbbls/d. As for refined products, gasoline stocks rose by 0.1MMbbls, while distillate stocks fell by 0.8MMbbls. US refinery utilization softened further to around 85.4% as refineries aim to complete maintenance activity before winter demand kicks in.

Red Sea Shipping Crisis Continues Unabated: Extended Disruptions Forecasted Into 2024

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