Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com — Crude prices fell after bolting higher the previous week while gold failed again at the $1,800 test, setting both up for pivotal moves next week as oil producers’ cartel OPEC+ and the Federal Reserve gather for their monthly meetings.

Idiosyncrasy may also be the order for all markets next week as the White House begins releasing details of President Joe Biden’s purported tax hike on the wealthiest of Americans.

Biden reportedly wants to raise the federal capital gains tax to 43.4% for the richest of individuals, bringing combined state and federal rates in places such as New York and California to well above 50% — the highest ever in U.S. history. The president is targeting 0.3% of the American population to fund about $1 trillion in childcare, universal pre-kindergarten education and paid leave for workers. But he will need to overcome a major political hurdle in Congress to do so, Bloomberg reports.

While we await the administration’s word on this, let’s focus on what’s likely to happen in the energy and precious metals space, starting with Wednesday’s OPEC+ meeting.

If we were to believe the producers’ cartel, nothing material will come out of the April 28 meeting, which is to ratify pre-agreed production quotas for May through July.

The 23-member OPEC+ — which comprises the original 13 members of OPEC (i.e. the Saudi-led Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) and 10 other oil producing nations steered by Russia — decided on April 1 to increase output by 350,000 bpd in May and June and by more than 400,000 bpd in July.

Additionally, Saudi Arabia will also ease its unilateral cut of 1 million bpd over the same period, beginning with increases of 250,000 bpd in May and June.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, commenting ahead of the meeting, said the idea was “to review the market situation once again” before the start of May-July quotas.

Said Novak: “We made our plans a month ago, so if nothing out of the ordinary happens in the meantime, next week’s meeting will confirm those plans or tweak them.”

The trouble is, quite a lot has happened — in India and Japan, especially, in terms of Covid.

In Vienna too, Iran has been making rapid progress with the United States on talks for a nuclear deal that would free it from Trump-era sanctions to once again export its oil.

On the Covid front, India’s deaths are being overlooked or downplayed, understating the human toll of the outbreak, which accounts for nearly half of all new global cases of the pandemic. With hospitals unbearably full, oxygen supplies running low and people in line dying before they can see doctors, India’s second coronavirus wave is shaping into a crisis beyond help. To visualize what’s happening, think “Italy” in 2020 and add another 1.4 billion people to the mix.