Oil headed for a second weekly drop as optimism over a recovery in Chinese demand dimmed and US stockpiles kept rising.
West Texas Intermediate held below US$76 a barrel, set for a loss of almost 5 percent this week. The China reopening trade for commodities has flagged amid questions over the timing and extent of the country’s recovery. In the US, data midweek showed nationwide holdings expanded for a sixth week.
Crude has swung within a US$10 range this year, with prices caught between concerns of a global slowdown and expectations of recovering oil demand in China after Beijing ditched its rigid Covid-19 Zero policy. Central banks in the US and Europe raised interest rates this week, and warned that they weren’t yet done with monetary tightening to combat still-too-elevated inflation.
Traders are also looking ahead to the next batch of sanctions on Russian energy flows, which will kick in at the weekend.
The European Union is set to impose a ban on seaborne imports of Russian petroleum products, while also starting a price-cap mechanism similar to one in place on crude.
The measures are meant to starve Moscow of funds amid the war in Ukraine.
Oil’s in “limbo as the market awaits tangible signs of China’s oil demand recovery,” said Vandana Hari, founder of Vanda Insights. “
The EU products ban is not seen as a major factor but it still comes with a bit of uncertainty.”
Brent for April settlement added 2 cents to US$82,19 a barrel.
Crude’s retreat this week has come alongside declines in other leading industrial commodities, with copper and iron ore also lower. — Bloomberg.



