Oil headed for a seventh weekly gain as investors fret over a fast-tightening market, geopolitical tensions and freezing weather in the US.
West Texas Intermediate hit a fresh seven-year high near $91 a barrel, set for a jump of more than 4% this week. Brent has surged 18% since the year began and banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. forecast it’ll reach $100.
Gains this week have been driven by a combination of factors. Investors have expressed doubt the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies can deliver in full on plans to boost output. At the same time, traders are tracking the situation in Ukraine amid concerns Russia plans to invade, which Moscow has denied. In Texas, a wave of freezing weather has hit some supply.
Oil has rallied 61% over the past year, joining a broad rally in commodities, as demand roared back from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. The upsurge has eroded stockpiles, and prompted traders to pay steep premiums for near-term supplies. The jump will fan inflationary pressures, squeezing consumers and alarming politicians concerned about the fast-rising cost of living.
“Oil prices remain constructive on solid fundamentals,” said John Driscoll, director of Singapore-based JTD Energy Services Pte. “OPEC continues to fall short of its target, although it is promising to do better.”
Prices:
WTI for March delivery rose 0.5% to $90.69 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 9:41 a.m. in Singapore.
Earlier, prices hit $90.89, the highest since October 2014.
Brent for April settlement added 0.4% to $91.44 a barrel on the ICE Futures Europe exchange.
OPEC+ members set production policy for March earlier this week, agreeing to a nominal increase in collective output of 400,000 barrels a day for next month. However, there have been consistent signs that the group hasn’t been able to meet previous increments in full and may struggle to do so again.
Oil markets are severely backwardated, a bullish pattern marked by premiums for near-term supplies. Brent’s prompt spread — the differential between its nearest two contracts — was $1.44 a barrel on Friday, up from 41 cents at the start of the year. The six-month spread has widened to more than $6.
“Supply is tightening as inventories continue to draw,” said Driscoll “The six-month backwardation is over $6, or $1-per-barrel per month, and oil demand is picking up.”
Still, as prices forge higher there have been a couple of warnings. Citigroup Inc. set a bearish position for December Brent futures, saying it’s comfortable with taking a contrarian view as the market will swing to a surplus.
ConocoPhillips also flagged that traders should be concerned about strong oil-production growth in the US this year and in 2023. “If you’re not worried about it, you should be,” Chief Executive Officer Ryan Lance said.
Among industry data due later on Friday is the Baker Hughes rig count for the US, an indication of shale-production activity. This week’s print may top 500. That’s a rebound from the pandemic-era low of 172 in August 2020.