Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - What is arguably the most important event of the oil calendar is almost here, but oil bulls may not be feeling too peppy about it. In fact, after Friday’s price crash, those long oil might have an ominous feeling about the Dec 5-6 OPEC meeting.

For weeks, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has been telegraphing to the market that it hopes to keep the production cut pact it made with Russia and other allies a year ago in place until June, and prices will remain supported at current levels or even higher.

Now, that looks easier said than done.

That’s because on Friday the market heard from Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak that he would prefer if the OPEC+ partnership took a decision closer to April on extending the production cut deal, set to expire in March. For a market that initially thought OPEC+ might not completely rule out deeper production cuts at its December meeting, Novak’s remarks couldn’t have sent a worse message.

The Russian stance, and President Donald Trump’s signing of two bills aimed at supporting protests by Hong Kong rioters against Beijing - a move further threatening the U.S.-China trade deal - sealed oil’s fate last week, leading to a 5% crash in crude prices.

Oil is still up strongly on the year, with U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude showing a 22% gain on the year and global benchmark U.K. Brent 12%. Yet, if OPEC doesn’t continue cutting production, it’s hard to imagine those gains holding up. Last week alone, both benchmarks lost more than 4%.

Gold, on the other hand, benefitted from Trump’s latest wavering on China via his Hong Kong actions.

Both gold futures for February delivery on New York’s COMEX and spot gold, which tracks live trades in bullion, settled just in the positive on Friday, erasing losses from earlier in the week.

Energy Review

What will OPEC possibly do in the coming week?

Despite the high drama created by Novak and last week’s resultant price crash, there’s a possibility the cartel will still get a deal before Friday. For all their wavering, the Russians may agree after all to kick OPEC+’s 1.2-million-bpd-cuts can further down the road to June. We’ve seen Moscow at this sort of inflection point before and we’ve seen it ultimately going OPEC’s way. There is a chance it will do so again.

The other question, of course, is whether Saudi Arabia will get the price it wants for crude going forth, particularly with the announcement of the final pre-listing price of its Aramco stock scheduled on the opening day of the OPEC meeting.