|

Oil: Speculators buy Brent – ING

The Oil market managed a second consecutive week of gains, driven largely by tariff de-escalation. However, the market is in limbo this morning as it weighs what impact, if any, the US credit downgrade by Moody’s Investors Service will have on Oil. In addition, there’s still plenty of uncertainty over how Iranian nuclear talks will play out, ING's commodity experts Ewa Manthey and Warren Patterson note.

Market focuses on a call between Trump and Putin

"For today, much of the attention is on a scheduled call between President Trump and President Putin about the Russia-Ukraine war. The market will be on the lookout for any signs of potential de-escalation. Fundamentally, though, even if we were to see a peace deal and the eventual lifting of sanctions against Russia, there would only be a limited increase in supply. Russia has managed to weather Western sanctions relatively well by rerouting Oil flows to China and India."

"The latest positioning data shows that speculators increased their net long in ICE Brent by 53,586 lots to 151,144 lots over the last reporting week. This increase was predominantly driven by fresh longs entering the market as sentiment improved with the tariff pause between China and the US."

"The US Oil rig count fell for the third consecutive week, declining by 1 last week to 473, leaving the count at its lowest since late January, according to Baker Hughes data. Lower prices have seen a pullback in drilling activity in the US. If current prices persist, we’re likely to see a further easing."

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD keeps the rangebound trade near 1.1850

EUR/USD is still under pressure, drifting back towards the 1.1850 area as Monday’s session draws to a close. The modest decline in spot comes as the US Dollar picks up a bit of support, while thin liquidity and muted volatility, thanks to the US market holiday, are exaggerating price swings and keeping trading conditions choppy.
 

GBP/USD flirts with daily lows near 1.3630

GBP/USD has quickly given back Friday’s solid gains, turning lower at the start of the week and drifting back towards the 1.3630 area. The focus now shifts squarely to Tuesday’s UK labour market report, which is likely to keep the quid firmly in the spotlight and could set the tone for Cable’s next move.

Gold battle around $5,000 continues

Gold is giving back part of Friday’s sharp rebound, deflating below the key $5,000 mark per troy ounce as the new week gets underway. Modest gains in the US Dollar are keeping the metal in check, while thin trading conditions, due to the Presidents Day holiday in the US, are adding to the choppy and hesitant tone across markets.

AI Crypto Update: Bittensor eyes breakout as AI tokens falter 

The artificial intelligence (AI) cryptocurrency segment is witnessing heightened volatility, with top tokens such as Near Protocol (NEAR) struggling to gain traction amid the persistent decline in January and February.

The week ahead: Key inflation readings and why the AI trade could be overdone

It is likely to be a quiet start to the week, with US markets closed on Monday for Presidents Day. European markets are higher across the board and gold is clinging to the $5,000 level after the tamer than expected CPI report in the US reduced haven flows to precious metals.

XRP steadies in narrow range as fund inflows, futures interest rise

Ripple is trading in a narrow range between $1.45 (immediate support) and $1.50 (resistance) at the time of writing on Monday. The remittance token extended its recovery last week, peaking at $1.67 on Sunday from the weekly open at $1.43.