Benchmark oil prices are showing a moderate rise on Monday morning after declining over the past seven weeks.
The price of February futures for Brent on the London ICE Futures exchange at 7:10 a.m. is $76.36 per barrel, which is $0.52 (0.69%) higher than at the close of the previous session. Last Friday, these contracts rose in price by $1.42 (1.9%) to $75.47 per barrel.
Quotes for January futures for WTI in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) by this time increased by $0.41 (0.58%) to $71.64 per barrel. At the end of the previous session, they rose by $1.89 (2.7%) to $71.23 per barrel.
Last week, the price of Brent fell by 3.9%, while WTI fell by 3.8%. Both brands finished in the red for the seventh week in a row, which has not been seen since 2018.
Since the end of September, oil has fallen in price by about 20%, despite the continuation and deepening of voluntary oil production cuts by OPEC+ countries, including Russia and Saudi Arabia.
Oil market participants also evaluate the data that consumer prices (CPI) in China in November fell by 0.5% year-on-year, the fastest pace since November 2020. The consensus forecast was for a 0.1% decline last month, according to Trading Economics. In October, they fell by 0.2%.
“Price gains are somewhat limited early this week due to concerns about demand in China,” wrote Yip Jun Ron of IG Asia Pte.
Meanwhile, data from the oilfield services company Baker Hughes showed that over the past week, the number of operating oil rigs in the United States decreased by two to 503 units. The number of gas rigs, meanwhile, increased by three to 119, the highest level since September.