Oil posted a weekly decline as volatile trading and recession fears overshadowed a fundamentally tight supply picture.

West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose to settle over US$104 a barrel on Friday, but it wasn’t enough to stave off a weekly decline of 3.4 per cent. Investors remain concerned that restrictive US monetary policy could herald a recession. Still, physical signals remain robust, especially in the US, where the prompt timespread, which closely reflects the supply and demand balances at the country’s biggest storage hub in Cushing, Oklahoma, surged to the highest level since March earlier in the week. 

“We believe it is premature for commodities to succumb to recession concerns when the global economy is still growing and markets remain in deficit on strong demand,” said Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts, including Jeffrey Currie, in a note to clients.

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Crude’s volatile trading means that it’s well down from last month’s high, but still up more than 35 per cent this year following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The complex market outlook has spurred banks to offer starkly different scenarios for prices, with Goldman Sachs remaining broadly bullish while Citigroup Inc. has said the commodity is at risk of a significant tumble.

Meanwhile, in the Permian Basin’s hub in Midland, Texas, inventories are about 600,000 barrels lower than last year, according to Geoffrey Craig, global energy analyst at Ursa Space. Outside of the US, a key export route for Kazakh oil risks being suspended as it appeals a Russian court order for it to temporarily shut down.

Prices:

  • WTI for August delivery added US$2.06 to settle at US$104.79 a barrel
    • The contract fell 3.4 per cent this week
  • Brent for September settlement gained US$2.37 to settle at US$107.02 a barrel.

In China, meanwhile, investors are tracking efforts by Beijing to buttress growth after anti-virus lockdowns hurt the economy and energy consumption in the first half. The Ministry of Finance may allow local governments to sell 1.5 trillion yuan (US$220 billion) of special bonds for infrastructure funding.