Energy & precious metals - weekly review and outlook

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Investing.com -- “Patience” - it’s a commodity two men closely watched by markets - Fed Chair Jay Powell and OPEC chief Abdulaziz bin Salman - could use next week.

Federal Reserve boss Powell and his colleagues will need it to see if inflation indeed slows meaningfully if the central bank decides on its first rate hike pause in 18 months.

Meanwhile, at OPEC, Abdulaziz will require more patience than possibly anyone at the Fed as the oil cartel saw another loss in crude prices at the end of last week despite a highly-publicized Saudi output cut.

The Fed’s June policy-making on Wednesday is expected to vote for a break from a rate hike campaign that started 15 months ago - even as the central bank confronts a U.S. economy that’s resilient and feeding inflation despite persistent talk of recession.

Bloomberg provided a snapshot of analysts' thoughts to see divided markets - and the Fed itself was on a stay in rates:

“Those who prefer to skip a hike in June want to wait and see - given the long and variable lags of monetary policy - how 500 basis points of rate hikes to date are cooling the economy. More hawkish members are convinced rates aren’t yet restrictive enough, and the Fed shouldn’t risk falling behind the curve. We see a ‘hawkish skip’ as a way to maintain unanimity on the committee.”

The U.S. Consumer Price Index hit 40-year highs in June 2022, expanding at an annual rate of 9.1%. Since then, it has slowed, growing at just 4.9% per annum in April, for its slowest expansion since October 2021. The Fed’s favorite price indicator, the Personal Consumption Expenditures, or PCE, Index, meanwhile, grew by 4.4% in April. Both the CPI and PCE are, however, still expanding at more than twice the Fed’s 2% per annum target for inflation.

Traders now have their eyes on the May CPI reading due Tuesday, a day before the Fed decision.

On the OPEC+front, crude prices finished Friday’s trading even lower than before last weekend’s meeting of the world’s top oil producers, where Saudi Arabia tried to “surprise” the market with another production cut.

That surprise is in inverted commas because many market watchers had already appeared to know that Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman and his Saud contingent would announce a unilateral output cut if there was no willingness by the rest to put up one.

The million-barrel cut that Abdulaziz tried to cutely label as a “Saudi lollipop” couldn’t sustain its sweetness beyond a couple of days.

After a fleeting pop of nearly 3% on Sunday and another 1% rebound on Wednesday, crude prices had fallen most this week.