Russia’s fuel export ban and rate hikes outweigh, causing oil to settle lower

Russia’s fuel export ban and rate hikes outweigh, causing oil to settle lower

Sept 21 (Reuters) – Oil prices settled lower after choppy ​trading on Thursday, rising as ⁢much as $1 a barrel after a Russian ban‌ on fuel exports snatched the focus from⁣ Western economic headwinds that had pushed‌ prices down $1 a barrel early in the session.

Brent futures for November delivery settled ⁢down ⁢23 cents to $93.30 a barrel, while U.S.⁢ West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) ‍settled down 3 cents to $89.63. Both benchmarks‍ had risen and fallen⁤ more than $1 earlier on Thursday.

Russia temporarily banned ⁣exports ⁢of gasoline and⁢ diesel⁤ to all countries outside a circle of four ex-Soviet states with immediate effect to stabilize⁤ the domestic fuel ‌market, the government said on Thursday.

The shortfall, which will ⁤force Russia’s fuel buyers to ‍shop elsewhere,​ caused heating oil futures to rise by nearly​ 5% on Thursday.

“As diesel‌ and gasoil likely advance to new highs,‌ they will be positioned⁢ to provide some upward‌ pull on the crude markets,” said Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch and Associates in ⁤Galena, Illinois.

The Fed on‍ Wednesday maintained interest rates, but stiffened its hawkish‌ stance, projecting a quarter-percentage-point increase to 5.50-5.75% by year-end.

That could dampen economic ⁤growth and overall fuel demand. The U.S. dollar surged to its highest ​since early March, making oil and other commodities more expensive‍ for buyers using other currencies.

U.S. unemployment benefit claims dropped to an eight-month low last week, the U.S. Labor Department‍ reported. John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLC ⁣in New York, called this another factor that would ‍encourage high interest⁤ rates.

“The Fed stance and a strong ⁢labor market has driven equities and commodities lower,​ pressuring oil,”‌ said Kilduff.

The Bank of England ⁣mirrored ⁣the Fed⁢ and held ‍interest rates on Thursday after a long run of hikes, but said it was not taking a recent⁣ fall in ‌inflation for granted.

Norway’s central ⁤bank raised ‍its benchmark interest rate on ‌Thursday and, in a surprise move, said it would probably hike again in December.

Oil prices remained supported by ‍concern about tight ‍supply globally entering the fourth quarter. U.S. crude stocks at⁣ Cushing, the WTI delivery hub, are ⁣at their ⁣lowest⁣ since ​July 2022 as the Organization ‍of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies‌ maintain production cuts.

Reporting by Paul Carsten and Natalie Grover in London⁢ and Laura Sanicola and Trixie Yap; Editing by Sonali ⁢Paul, ‌Jane Merriman, Alexandra Hudson, David Gregorio ​and Barbara Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson ​Reuters Trust ⁢Principles. Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tabLaura SanicolaThomson ReutersReports on oil and energy, including refineries, markets and renewable fuels. Previously worked at Euromoney Institutional‍ Investor and ⁣CNN.‍

Original​ from www.reuters.com

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