Oil caught a three-year high of over $86 per barrel on Thursday inspired by tight supply and a global energy crunch. However, prices reduced as some investors took profits on signs the rally was looking overstretched.
Serving to drive the latest gain, a supply report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration on Wednesday conferred crude and fuel inventories tightened. Crude inventories at the Cushing storage hub dropping to a three-year low. [EIA/S]
Brent crude climbed as high as $86.10, the most distinguished after October 2018, but at 1155 GMT was under 92 cents, or 1.1%, over $84.90. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude dropped 74 cents, or 0.9%, to $82.68.
aCCORDING TO Louise Dickson of Rystad Energy, traders who had set $86 as their selling threshold took the chance to already pocket some profit. Oil prices fell as a consequence.
The price of Brent has grown above 60% this year. A slow ramp-up backed it in supply by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and partners and a global coal and gas crunch that has prompted a switch to oil for power generation.
Coal and Natural Gas Decline
Oil also came under stress from a decline in coal and natural gas prices. In China, coal decreased 11% on Thursday, continuing losses following Beijing signalled it might reconcile to cool the market.
According to Jeffrey Halley, an analyst at brokerage OANDA, coal and gas prices are sliding and the relative strength index technical indicators are still in the overbought area. Hence the chances of a sharp but material reduction in oil prices are increasing.
Some analysts are asking for oil to rally even more as OPEC+ is likely to adhere to its plan for gradual production increases. At the same time, demand is anticipated to reach pre-epidemic levels.
Rystad stated the outlook was bullish for the remainder of the year, and Giovanni Staunovo of Swiss bank UBS announced in a report that he suspected Brent to trade at $90 in December and March.
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