West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the US crude oil benchmark, sinks after hitting a daily high of $91.84 per barrel, though profit-taking and recent news of an increase in oil output weighed on oil prices. Therefore, WTI is trading at $88.54 a barrel, down 2.37%.
The rise of the Greenback (USD) is seen as the main driver, while traders booked profits, as noted by Reuters. US Treasury bond yields, particularly the 10-year benchmark note hitting 4.70%, sponsored a leg-up to the buck, as shown by the US Dollar Index (DXY). The DXY, which measures the US Dollar performance against six currencies, trades at around 106.94, posting gains of 0.72%, a headwind for US dollar-denominated commodities.
Oil traders must be aware of an ongoing economic slowdown. The latest China’s Caixin Manufacturing PMI, which decelerated, spurred a revision in the global economic outlook. Fitch Ratings said that despite the resilience in US consumer demand, , reviewed its forecast downwards, for 2024, due to China’s deepening property slump.
That data and weaker-than-expected factory activity data in Europe weighed on WTI’s prices, as an economic deceleration could dent oil’s demand.
Lately, a survey revealed by Reuters showed that oil output climbed for the second straight month in September, as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) revealed. Increases were led by Nigeria and Iran, as OPEC countries pumped 27.73 million barrels per day, up from 120,000 in August.
In the meantime, Turkey announced the country would restart operations this week on Iraq’s pipeline, while Saudi Arabia could begin to ease its additional supply cut of 1 million barrels per day.
Despite falling, the US crude oil benchmark remains upward biased, but if WTI tumbles below the latest cycle low of $88.24 achieved on September 26, that could open the door for further losses. A breach of the latter would expose as next support the 50-day moving average (DMA) at $84.66. Conversely, to resume its uptrend, WTI must climb past the $94.99 year-to-date (YTD) high so that buyers can remain hopeful of challenging $100 per barrel.
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