Oil prices are actively rising on Thursday morning, recovering after falling to a three-week low the day before on data on another increase in U.S. fuel inventories.
The price of April futures for Brent on London’s ICE Futures Exchange stood at $83.55 a barrel by 7:05 a.m., $0.71 (0.86%) above the previous session’s closing price. Those contracts fell by $2.62 (3.1%) to $82.84 per barrel at the close of trading on Wednesday.
The price of WTI futures for March at electronic trades of the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) is $77.17 per barrel by that time, which is $0.76 (0.99%) above the final value of the previous session. The contract fell by $2.46 (3.1%) to $76.41 a barrel at the previous session, its lowest level since January 10.
The day before the US Department of Energy announced that crude stocks in the country grew by 4.14 mln barrels last week. Growth rate has been recorded for six weeks in a row. Analysts polled by Bloomberg expected a decrease in oil reserves by 1 million barrels.
Meanwhile, marketable gasoline reserves rose by 2.58 million barrels and distillates by 2.32 million barrels. Experts had expected gasoline inventories to increase by 2 million barrels and distillate inventories to decrease by 1.5 million barrels.
“The Department of Energy data pointed to an unexpected increase in inventories of all fuels,” said Tariq Zahir, managing partner at Tyche Capital Advisors. The weakness in the oil market may well last, and additional declines will be an opportunity to open long positions, he added.
Also on Wednesday, it became known that the ministers of the monitoring committee of OPEC+ (JMMC), considering the data on production for November and December 2022, recommended not to change the quotas on oil production. The next JMMC meeting is scheduled for April 3, 2023.
In addition, a key event for global markets was the Federal Reserve’s first meeting of the year. The Fed expectedly raised its key interest rate by 25 basis points and said it expects more rate hikes to return inflation to its 2% target.
“Those statements sounded pretty hawkish,” said Tyche Capital’s Zaheer.