Oil rebounds after worst quarter of 2019, but demand fears persist

Bloomberg

Oil rose after its biggest quarterly slump of the year, yet ongoing concerns that a faltering global economy will erode demand continued to weigh on the market.
Futures increased 1.1% in New York, having tumbled 7.5% in the past three months as Saudi Arabia fully restored its output following devastating attacks that had temporarily halved its production. Attention is now returning to US-China trade negotiations, with investors looking for clues on the prospect for oil demand as high-level talks are expected on October 10-11.
Saudi Arabia’s recovery from the attacks and the concerns over growth in oil consumption have driven crude prices back to where they were before the September 14 attacks. This means that while oil gained on Tuesday, the increase could be temporary, said Harry Tchilinguirian, head of commodity markets strategy at BNP Paribas SA.
“The bounce back in oil prices looks more technical than fundamentally or macro-driven, and it is building on what was a very weak close” on Monday, Tchilinguirian said. “I am not sure that the very short-term momentum is there to sustain it.”
Brent for December settlement gained 54 cents, or 0.9%, to $59.79 a barrel on the ICE Futures Europe Exchange. The November contract, which expired Monday, ended the session 1.8% lower. The global benchmark crude on Tuesday traded at a $5.29 premium to WTI for the same month.
Saudi Aramco returned productionto 9.9 million barrels a day on September 25 and output is now a “little bit” higher than that, said Ibrahim Al-Buainain, chief executive officer of the company’s trading unit, said on Monday.

The world’s top oil exporter has also restored some spare capacity following the attacks on its energy infrastructure and hasn’t missed any contracted shipments, he said.
Ahead of the expected Washington-Beijing talks next week, Asian manufacturing sentiment remained mostly bleak in September due to the U.S.-China trade conflict and waning global demand. The euro area’s manufacturing sector slumped last month.
“In view of subdued global economic prospects and rising U.S. oil production, any concerns” about oil supply tightening have evaporated, said Carsten Fritsch, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt.

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