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Oil down almost 4%, surrendering war premium amid Fed focus

Published 10/29/2023, 09:30 PM
Updated 10/30/2023, 02:52 PM
© Reuters.

Investing.com - Crude prices tumbled almost 4% on Monday as the market looked beyond the war in the Middle East to focus on what the Federal Reserve might do or say at its interest rate decision on Wednesday.

Concerns over how U.S. jobs numbers for October will turn out on Friday also kept oil traders on the edge.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, crude for December delivery, settled at $82.31, down $3.23, or 3.8%.

The US crude benchmark has been in yo-yo mode for a week now, rising or falling more than 2% in a session, as the Israel-Hamas war raging on the Palestinian territory of Gaza had markets on the tenterhooks.

Last week, WTI finished down 3.6% and is due to finish October down almost 10% as things stand.

UK-origin Brent crude for December delivery settled at $87.45, down $3.03, or 3.4%. Last week, the global crude benchmark fell nearly 2%. It is on track to end October down 9%.

It would be remiss to say traders aren’t on the lookout for headlines on the war in the Middle East, after Israel launched at the weekend its much-anticipated ground assault on Gaza. Israeli troops and tanks attacked Gaza's main northern city from the east and west of the Palestinian enclave on Monday, Reuters reported.

No disruption to oil traffic in the Middle East

But without any disruption to the oil traffic moving in waters around the battle zone, it was hard to maintain a war premium risk for crude just on grounds of proximity, said those in the know.

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"There is a propensity for market users in all their guises to have at least some oil length going into the weekends and when the fear of conflict spread shows no validation come the early hours of Monday mornings' openings, that fear hedge is ordinarily unwound," John Evans of oil broker PVM said in comments carried by Reuters.

CMC Markets (LON:CMCX) analyst Tina Teng concurred, saying:

"Despite an escalation in the Hamas-Israel war, the ground invasion was widely expected. The weekend playout signals no further expansion into a wider regional war, which caused a retreat in oil prices."

The Fed is widely expected to keep rates on hold this week. But officials have still kept the door open for one more rate hike this year, especially following several hotter-than-expected inflation readings.

The dollar steadied on Monday, retaining recent gains and weakening international demand for crude, which is priced in the US currency.

The key piece of economic data this week will, however, be Friday’s non-farm payrolls report for October. After a blockbuster 336,000 jobs were added in September, economists are expecting more moderate jobs growth of 182,000, which is still consistent with a robust labor market.

The unemployment rate is expected to remain at 3.8%, while wage growth is expected to ease to 4% year-on-year, which would mark a post-pandemic period low, and could help bolster the Fed’s view that price pressures are easing and that it doesn't need to raise interest rates any further, relieving pressure on economic activity in the largest oil consumer in the world.

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Ahead of Friday’s data, market participants will be looking at data on third-quarter employment costs on Tuesday for signs that wage growth is moderating.

But before the Fed meeting, markets are also awaiting key purchasing managers index data from China, which is set to shed more light on business activity in the world’s biggest oil importer.

China’s economy has shown some signs of stabilizing in recent months after seeing a sharp decline in growth this year. The country’s aviation regulator recently said it will increase domestic flights to 34% above pre-pandemic levels- a positive sign for oil demand, although air travel still makes up a small portion of the China’s overall fuel consumption.

The Bank of Japan is also set to meet on Tuesday, with traders pricing in a potential policy shift in the bank as it grapples with rising inflation.

(Peter Nurse and Ambar Warrick contributed to this item)

Latest comments

Dow is up for 500+ since nobody really cares about Gaza or Ukraine because it’s geographically very very far especially for people in Asia, only some drama on TV
And the Dos is down 2,500+ since January of this year.  Does that help prove your point?  I doubt it.   Since the other Hamas supporting countries stopped launching their missiles towards Israel, our DDG's haven't had to use our hardware to stop anything.  Hence, no big bucks needed to replace them, (for now).
Dos = Dow
And further, why isn't the House of Saud and the rest of the robed thug coalition  protecting that chunk of real estate? It is in their best interest. I smell another payday coming for Bobo and Family, Inc.
will they also get 2 billion from the saudis like the trump-family did?
The older I get, the easier to see through the BS. But, you still have to trade the nonsense, even though you know what the end game is. When Bobo sent the Amerika Armada full force to the Red Sea, it had nothing to do with protecting Israel, it only had to do with keeping that strategic chunk of waterway freely flowing with oil tankers. And the couple clunkers lobbed into Syria; just an added bonus. Bobo must keep gas prices down at ALL COST, it's election season.
Moving some ships and lobbing some missiles are FAR from "ALL COST" for the US, which spends more on routine training exercises.
 "ALL COST" is being paid. The ships are implementing strong arm diplomacy; not a shot being fired, costing the war machine complex hundreds of BILLIONS:( Diplomacy SUCKS! No bullets, no bombs, no body bags. Whooda Thunk? And, a day when markets were through the roof, was a sad day for all the 'tickers' of the war machine:)
calling all oil bulls.. what happened to 100+ a barrel this week..?
so many layers of bs...
I think you carry even more in your head
it means inflation is gone with oily wind.
Anybody seen oil bull Warm Camp? He promised he wouldn't go into hiding when oil goes down.
EVEN DURING BOMBING IN ISRAEL NO DISRUPTIONS IN OIL TRAFFIC. IT IS MANIPULATED BY THE FINANCIAL BIGGIES TO PUMP STOCK MARKETS TO LOOT THE RETAIL TRADERS, INVESTORS. THIS WILL CONTINUE DESPITE FED, INFLATION, INTEREST RATE, RECESSION ETC., CRUDE WILL BE DUMPED TO $70 AND MARKETS PUMPED 10-12% EVEN THOUGH THE RESULTS OF MANY COMPANIES R BAD
 I was just about to tell him that people actually pay more attention to lower case text :)
Biden's deployment of 2 carrier taskforces and strikes on Iranian assets in Syria calmed the market.
 True that. The Iran noise seems to have quietened since.
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