By Sharon Cho and Alex Longley
Fuel margins rocketed again on Friday, however, with four of the biggest plants in Texas facing delays of several weeks or more to resume operations. While that potentially limits demand for crude, it also raises the potential for prolonged fuel shortages that could spread across the U.S.
Elsewhere, the White House said it would be willing to meet with Tehran to discuss a “diplomatic way forward” in efforts to return to the nuclear deal that the U.S. quit in 2018, adding further pressure to prices.
Oil is still up more than 20% this year due to Saudi Arabian output cuts and an improving demand outlook. Technical indicators had been showing that crude was due for a pullback, with 14-day Relative Strength Indexes for both the U.S. and global oil benchmarks above 70 in a sign the commodity is overbought.
“Though output is likely to be ramped up fairly quickly again, the focus now appears to have shifted more to refineries, which may take longer to resume their production,” said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commmerzbank AG.
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There should be only a small and transitory impact on global oil prices from the U.S. freeze as the supply and demand impacts balance out, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said.
The cold snap and power cuts affected more than 20 refineries in Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma. Crude-processing capacity fell by about 5.5 million barrels a day, said Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst for Energy Aspects Ltd.
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