Oil prices steady ahead of US election, but weak China data weighs

Updated - January 15, 2018 at 08:02 PM.

crude

Oil prices were stable on Tuesday as financial investors and traders were cautiously positioning themselves for a win by Hillary Clinton in the US presidential elections.

US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were at $44.97 at 0610 GMT, virtually flat from their previous settlement. The contract had gained nearly 1.9 per cent in the previous session.

International Brent crude prices were up 8 cents at $46.23 per barrel.

“Investors piled back into the energy sector,” ANZ bank said, with polls putting Clinton ahead of her Republican competitor Donald Trump in Tuesday’s election. Clinton is seen by investors as offering greater certainty and stability.

China oil data

In China, oil data released on Tuesday was weak, albeit coming down from high levels.

“Chinese oil imports ... eased slightly in October but remained at elevated levels (on year),” ANZ bank said on Tuesday following the data release.

China, which vies with the United States for top spot as the biggest crude importer, bought 6.78 million barrels of oil from abroad in October, down 12.9 per cent from the previous month and one of the lowest volume this year on a daily basis.

The country’s refined oil product exports jumped 24 per cent on a year earlier, as the nation produced more fuel than it could absorb.

OPEC output cut

Crude prices were held back by lingering doubts over the ability of oil producers to agree on a planned output cut to prop up a market which has been dogged by two years of oversupply.

The chief executive of US oil giant Exxon Mobil, Rex Tillerson, had said on Monday that global oil supplies have exceeded demand by 1 million to 2 million barrels per day since the start of 2015.

In physical oil markets, US pipeline companies with operations at the heart of the country’s commercial oil industry at Cushing, Oklahoma, restarted on Monday after an earthquake late on Sunday triggered safety shutdowns.

Published on November 8, 2016 06:45