Energy & precious metals - weekly review and outlook

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- The price of a commodity - or for that matter, anything - is invariably subject to supply and demand. In oil’s case, the events of the past three years have shown that supply is probably a greater price influencer than demand.

It was not demand but OPEC’s supply strangle and the sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine invasion that got a barrel to above $100 last year. Likewise, the journey back down to $70 was largely a consequence of the Biden administration releasing more than 200 million barrels from the U.S. reserve, although China’s draconian COVID controls at that time did put a serious damper on demand from the largest crude importer.

Thus, when the Wall Street Journal reported Friday that the United Arab Emirates was having an internal debate about the prospect of leaving OPEC, the bottom suddenly fell out of the oil market for a while.

A decision by the UAE to leave the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries would diminish the oil price-setting powers of the group that accounts for nearly 38% of global output. The Emiratis produce more than 3 million barrels daily and are OPEC’s third most prolific producer.

The Journal said the UAE’s contemplation of an exit came as its discontent over the Yemen war grows with the Saudis - who practically decide on everything at OPEC.

A couple of hours after the story broke, Reuters issued a rebuttal, quoting a UAE official as saying that the Journal’s account of the matter was "far from the truth".

Crude - which tumbled more than $2.30 a barrel, or 3%, earlier on worries that OPEC might be coming apart at the seams - retraced all losses, ending the day up 2% and the week 4% higher.

“It’s debatable whether we’d have got such a gain on the day if not for that Journal story,” said John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital. “You know how it is; the bull fervor that usually follows the denial of something that’s negative to the market.”

“Fundamentally, it was a positive week for oil with data showing record U.S. crude exports and an uptick in gasoline demand,” Kilduff said. But the affirmation of OPEC’s status was what gave the bulls the trigger for a rally, he said. “It reinforces the notion that more than China demand, it’s OPEC supply - or cuts - that’s holding the oil market where it is,” Kilduff said, referring to the two million barrels per day the cartel has been keeping off the market since October.

The Journal story was grounded more in politics than in oil. It gave a lengthy explanation as to why the UAE would want to leave OPEC, saying relations between its president Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al Nahyan and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had soured, with the two men deliberately avoiding each other at public events in the Gulf.