Oil Futures Slide Below $100

 

The global benchmark Brent crude has fallen below $100 earlier this week, heading for its 5th straight weekly loss and longest streak of losses this year.

The last time Brent crude fell for that many weeks in a row was November, 2021.

“The main catalyst for the weakness not only in oil but across the whole commodities sector has been the risk that central banks, in their effort to curb inflation, will hike interest rates to the point that it kills growth and thereby drive the risk of a recession,” Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank told Insider.

That’s impacting energy markets because with the economic outlook deteriorating, traders and speculators are increasingly selling oil on the expectation that demand is going to drop.

While some anticipate Brent futures could rise to $150 a barrel, others like Citi say prices could tumble to $65 a barrel if a recession wipes out demand. But neither forecasts are realistic, according to Hansen, who expects prices to come down towards to $100-120 a barrel.

“This market is so incredibly difficult to call right now, but we probably have to accept that until we see inflationary pressures start to ease, then we are still at risk of additional selling hitting these markets thereby taking prices lower from where we are right now,” he said.

Meanwhile, in the physical market, where traders buy and sell actual cargoes of oil, Forties, a grade of North Sea crude that underpins the Brent global oil price, was quoted at its highest premium to the benchmark this week since 2008, according to Bloomberg. One trader bid for a cargo of oil loading in late July at a premium of $5.35 a barrel, the strongest in 14 years and found no sellers, Bloomberg data showed.

“That is reflecting a market that is tight,” Hansen said, as squeezed supply of physical crude oil would send prices up in line with the law of demand and supply.

“The physical market is not telling us the story that the futures market is telling us,” he added. “We have this discrepancy between the paper and the physical market and which one is going to come out on top? That really remains to be seen,” Hansen continued.