Oil futures ended lower on Monday, at their lowest since mid-September, with prices easing back after posting monthly and quarterly gains.
Analysts warned of “overbought” conditions in the market after oil prices touched their highest levels of the year in recent days, but expectations for a further tightening of supply continue to provide some support for prices.
Price action
-
West Texas Intermediate crude for November delivery
CLX23,
-2.22% CL.1,
-2.22%
fell $1.97, or 2.2%, to settle at $88.82 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest front-month finish since Sept. 13, according to Dow Jones Market Data. On Friday, the front-month contract tallied a nearly 9% rise for September and climbed by almost 29% for the third quarter. -
December Brent crude
BRN00,
-0.20% BRNZ23,
-0.20% ,
the global benchmark, declined by $1.49, or 1.6%, at $90.71 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, the lowest since Sept. 11. -
November gasoline
RBX23,
+0.47%
rose 0.5% to $2.41 a gallon, while November heating oil
HOX23,
-2.24%
lost 2.4% at $3.22 a gallon. -
Natural gas for November delivery
NGX23,
-2.66%
fell 3% to $2.84 per million British thermal units.
Market drivers
Oil has had a really good run this summer on the back of demand holding up, and showing signs of strength, while supply remains somewhat constrained, Colin Cieszynski, chief market strategist at SIA Wealth management, told MarketWatch.
“That being said, it has also become technically overbought on several measures, and a correction appears to be starting with an overnight bounce fading and the price falling under its own weight for the moment,” he said.
WTI and Brent jumped by more than 25% in the third quarter, with the U.S. benchmark last week hitting its highest close in nearly 13 months. Brent last week traded at its highest since November.
Traders this week will be paying attention to an OPEC+ meeting of the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee, or JMMC, on Wednesday. The panel is made up of oil ministers from members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its Russia-led allies and has the authority to call for a full OPEC+ meeting if it decides one is needed.
“The market will be eager to see if there are any signs of a change in the group’s output policy, given the recent strength in the market. We do not believe that the group will change its output policy,” Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey, commodity analysts at ING, said in a note.
Crude has rallied over the past four months, with tightening supplies taking center stage. Analysts have cited Saudi Arabia’s June decision to implement a voluntary production cut of 1 million barrels a day beginning in July — a reduction that was recently extended through the end of the year — as the primary driver for the rally.
The extension of the voluntary oil output cuts by Saudi Arabia and Russia to the end of the year, “looks like it is set in stone,” said Anas Alhajji, an independent energy expert and managing partner at Energy Outlook Advisors. The JMMC meeting “will not change it.”
Still, “it remains to be seen if oil exports will increase since both countries can increase exports without changing production as the summer ends and domestic demand for oil declines,” Alhajji told MarketWatch.
The ING analysts held out the possibility, meanwhile, that Saudi Arabia could signal it’s ready to ease its additional cut after China’s official purchasing managers index reading for September indicated the first expansion in manufacturing activity in six months. They noted Saudi Arabia has cited uncertainty over China’s demand outlook as a factor in its decision to cut production.
The data “will provide some confidence with China’s manufacturing PMI returning to expansion territory in September for the first time since March, whilst the nonmanufacturing PMI remained in expansion territory over the month,” they wrote.
For now, the oil market would need to see something significant happen on either the supply or demand side to see a change in sentiment that would spark a breakout in prices in either direction, said Cieszynski.
“For supply, the OPEC and related meetings could have an impact but only if there is a notable change to supply,” he said. On the demand side, the manufacturing PMI reports have been “supportive so it would likely take a big miss somewhere to change thinking.”
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