Oil prices are rising on Wednesday morning after having risen the previous day on expectations that China will ease anti-coke restrictions.
The price of January Brent futures, which end trading on Wednesday, on the ICE Futures Exchange in London is $83.97 a barrel by 7:17 a.m. Ksk, up $0.94 (1.13%) from the previous session’s closing price. The more actively traded February futures rose $0.93 (1.1%) to $85.18 a barrel. On Tuesday, February contracts rose $0.36 (0.4%) to $84.25 a barrel.
The price of WTI futures for January at electronic trades on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) is $79.09 per barrel by that time, which is $0.89 (1.14%) above the final value of the previous session. The day before contract rose by $0.96 (1.2%) to $78.2 per barrel.
Chinese authorities the day before announced plans to more actively vaccinate the elderly population against coronavirus, reducing the time between vaccinations for those over 80 years to three months.
“The announcement followed unprecedented street protests and was the first signal that Beijing might consider easing draconian measures to control the spread of the coronavirus. The prospect of normalization in the world’s biggest oil importer has driven oil prices higher, the first significant recovery in two weeks,” said ActivTrades senior analyst Ricardo Evangelista.
The market’s attention is also directed towards OPEC+ meeting to be held on December 4. Eurasia Group analysts believe that the alliance may decide to reduce production quotas amid prospects of weakening demand in China.
Meanwhile, the American Petroleum Institute (API) data showed a decline of 7.85 million barrels of oil reserves in the USA last week instead of the 2.5 million barrels reduction which analysts expected.
Official data from the US Department of Energy on inventories will be released on Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. ksec.