Russia announced last week that it will extend export curbs, with more details of the reductions to be released in the coming days. Saudi Arabia — which along with Moscow sets the tone at the OPEC+ alliance — is widely expected by traders to follow suit by pushing its voluntary curbs into October.
Oil’s fortunes have improved this quarter following a lackluster first half as the supply reductions show signs of rebalancing the market, with US stockpiles slumping. Additional support for crude has come from speculation that the US Federal Reserve may be close to finishing its hiking campaign, as well as signs China’s efforts to bolster growth may be starting to gain traction.
The market’s underlying metrics point to expectations for tighter conditions. Among them, the spread between WTI’s two closest contracts has ballooned to 85 cents a barrel in backwardation. That’s a bullish pricing pattern, and is up from 43 cents a barrel one week ago.
Prices:
- WTI for October delivery rose 0.2% to $85.73 a barrel at 9:03 a.m. in Singapore.
- Earlier, prices gained to as much as $86.09 a barrel, the highest intraday level since November.
- A US holiday on Monday may thin trading volumes.
- Brent for November settlement added 0.1% to $88.64 a barrel.
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