Weaker demand outlook pauses Brent’s rally as it falls below $90/bbl

Weaker demand outlook pauses Brent’s rally as it falls below /bbl

Summary
Dollar firms ‍on solid US data
Mixed Chinese data, possibly weaker winter demand weigh
Rising ⁢oil ‍output from Iran, Venezuela also caps⁤ prices
U.S. crude stockpiles⁢ fall for fourth straight week⁤ -EIA

HOUSTON, Sept 7 (Reuters) – Global benchmark Brent crude⁢ oil fell below​ $90⁤ a barrel ‍on Thursday in volatile ⁤trade, halting a near two-week rally, on⁣ multiple signals warning of​ weaker demand in the coming months.

Brent crude futures settled 68 cents, or ⁢0.8%, lower at $89.92 ‌a barrel, after trading ​between $89.46 and $90.89.

U.S. West Texas⁤ Intermediate ‍crude (WTI) futures finished down 67⁤ cents, or 0.8%, at $86.67 ‍a​ barrel, after trading between ⁢$86.39 and $87.74.

Thursday’s fall came after nine ⁢straight sessions of gains ⁤in WTI and seven straight gains ‌in Brent.

Prices had also spiked earlier in the‍ week after Saudi Arabia and Russia, the⁤ world’s top two oil ⁢exporters, extended voluntary supply cuts ⁤to⁤ the year-end. These were on‍ top of‌ the April cuts ⁣agreed by several OPEC+ producers⁢ running⁤ to the end of 2024.

“Crude⁢ futures are​ feeling some corrective pressure ‍from a new​ high in the⁣ U.S. Dollar Index as well as more ⁤weakening economic numbers ‌from⁣ the euro zone, where economic⁣ activity‍ grew by‍ 0.1% vs ‌the 0.3% expected,” said Dennis Kissler, senior vice president of ⁣trading at BOK Financial.

The dollar gained, pushing the‌ yen to a 10-month low and driving the⁢ euro and sterling to their weakest⁤ levels in three ‍months, as investors placed their bets on a still-resilient U.S. economy. A stronger dollar boosts the cost of greenback-denominated oil purchases ⁢for holders of other ⁢currencies.

“As I ⁣begin to ⁣look down the road a bit ‍there are signals saying hold up,” said John Kilduff,‌ partner with Again ⁤Capital.

Market participants also digested‍ mixed data from China. Overall exports fell 8.8% in⁣ August year on year and imports contracted‌ 7.3%. But‍ crude imports surged 30.9%.

“The wind has been ​taken out​ of the bulls’ ⁢sail ‍overnight‍ by rising Chinese product‌ exports last month,‍ albeit crude oil​ imports rose,”‌ PVM Oil analyst Tamas Varga said.

Concerns about rising oil output from⁤ Iran ‍and⁢ Venezuela, which could balance out a portion on cuts from Saudi and Russia, kept a lid on the market as⁣ well.

U.S. ​demand, however, remained‌ strong, as crude oil stockpiles drew down by ⁣6.3 million ‌barrels last week, ‌falling for‌ a ⁤fourth consecutive week and down⁢ over ‍6% ⁣in the‍ last month, government data showed.

“At present, it​ is really difficult for us to see any negative ​factors due to supply constraints,” said CMC Markets’ Shanghai-based ‍analyst Leon Li.

“However, we‍ need to consider possible demand risks such as in the ⁣fourth quarter, ‍the market could⁢ slow into‌ an off-peak season for oil consumption⁤ after summer demand ends.”

Reporting by‍ Erwin‍ Seba in⁤ Houston; Additional reporting by Arathy Somasekhar in Houston; Ahmad‍ Ghaddar in London; Trixie Yap in Singapore
Editing by‍ Marguerita‌ Choy, Frances Kerry, Nick​ Macfie

Our‌ Standards: The⁣ Thomson Reuters Trust Principles….

Link from www.reuters.com rnrn

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