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Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Calendar Ahead

In This Article:

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - Another week, another sterling crude draw and the best weekly gain since July for the U.S. oil benchmark. All these may make crude appear like a winner.

The truth, though, is the oil market is at an inflection point where neither bull nor bear can probably tell with a great deal of accuracy where things are headed.

On the face of it, the recent fairy tale run of epic crude draws in the United States should unravel from here, given the end of the peak summer driving period.

Yet, instead of building from September, on some years, crude inventories have continued falling till October. Last year, for instance, after the drawdown of 5.8 million barrels in the penultimate week of August, for four weeks in a row stockpiles continued to decline for a cumulative 14.2 million barrels.

Hence, anticipation is strong among oil longs that the back-to-back inventory drops of 10 million and nearly 5 million barrels over the past two weeks will continue, albeit in a smaller way.

This is the good stuff for oil bulls.

Now for the bearish bit: The U.S. trade war with China, for all intent and purposes, is far from over.

While this week’s gain in oil was partly on the euphoria that Washington and Beijing were to restart negotiations in October, history has shown that such talks have often broken off to leave both sides in worse positions than before, and for tariffs to only go higher.

On Sept 1, the Trump administration began imposing a 15% tariff on an array of Chinese imports, after earlier move to install a 5% duty on U.S. crude -- the first of its kind. The United States also plans to increase to 30% from Oct. 1 the 25% duty placed on $250 billion worth of Chinese imports.

All these leave recession worries very much alive for global investors. Hence, “demand bears” are also remaining influential in oil, creating the whipsaw volatility seen throughout August.

On coming Thursday, OPEC’s Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee meets in Abu Dhabi to review the 1.2 million barrels per day of production cuts that the cartel and its key ally Russia have carried out since December. After the review, the committee will also recommend to OPEC’s top leadership what else needs to be done to bolster oil prices. This can mean more market swings as traders try and interpret its words.

In gold, the situation is also tricky for longs as the impending Federal Reserve meeting between Sept 17 and 18 makes investors unsure of what to do till then. Will the Fed cut rates again as it did in July? Or will it stay this time? Gold’s $1,500 support depends very much on that outcome. The European Central Bank rate decision in the coming week will also help shape direction for gold.