• SPX
  • $5,808.12
  • -0.03 %
  • -$1.74
  • DJI
  • $42,114.40
  • -0.61 %
  • -$259.96
  • N225
  • $37,913.92
  • -0.6 %
  • -$229.37
  • FTSE
  • $8,248.84
  • -0.25 %
  • -$20.54
  • IXIC
  • $18,518.61
  • 0.56 %
  • $103.12

Oil up 2% on Russian refinery attacks and signs of strong demand

By Reuters   |   Mar 13, 2024 at 09:04 AM EST
Oil up 2% on Russian refinery attacks and signs of strong demand

By Alex Lawler

LONDON (Reuters) -Oil prices rose about 2% on Wednesday, supported by potential supply disruption after Ukrainian attacks on Russian refineries, signs of strong demand and hopes that the Federal Reserve might start cutting interest rates soon despite sticky U.S. inflation.

Ukraine launched a sweeping drone attack on Russian regions on Wednesday, causing a fire at Rosneft's biggest oil refinery in what President Vladimir Putin said was an attempt to disrupt Russia's presidential election.

"The sudden but understandable brightening of (oil price) sentiment has been triggered by the continuous strikes on Russian refiners," said Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM.

Brent crude futures for May rose $1.52, or 1.9%, to $83.44 a barrel by 1300 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude for April gained $1.62, or 2.1%, to $79.18.

Despite the rally, Brent has traded in a narrow range above $80 for more than a month, briefly rising above $84 in that time.

Also adding support, Varga said, was Tuesday's supply report from the American Petroleum Institute.

In an indication of healthy demand, U.S. crude oil and fuel inventories fell last week according to sources citing the API report ahead of Wednesday's official U.S. inventory figures.

In an earlier sign of strong demand, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries on Tuesday stuck to its forecast for oil demand growth of 2.25 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2024, higher than many other forecasts.

The International Energy Agency, which expects demand growth to be much lower, updates its forecasts on Thursday.

Oil and the wider financial markets also found support from sentiment that slightly hotter than expected U.S. inflation will not derail interest rate cuts by the middle of the year. Lower rates support oil demand.

"The risk environment has largely stayed unfazed, riding on the firm belief that current market pricing for a rate cut only in June will do the job," said IG market strategist Yeap Jun Rong.

In a note to clients, Capital Economics analysts said they still forecast the Fed to start easing policy "around June".

(Reporting by Alex LawlerAdditional reporting by Katya Golubkova in Tokyo and Jeslyn Lerh in SingaporeEditing by David Goodman)

Did you find this insightful?


We are preparing, please wait

×
New Alert

Select an alert type

Choose sentiment spike or mentions spike or both to receive email alerts and app notification for the selected stock.
Note: Please be aware that you will receive an email only once a day, around 8:00 AM (EST), in the event of any spike.
In future if you don't want to receive any email then delete stocks added into alert section.

New Alert

Setup alert

×

Premium Content

This content is only available for premium members. Please become a paid member to access.

Download App

Currently, memberships can only be purchased through the app.

×

Log In


or

download app using google store Continue with Google download app using apple Continue with Apple

Email Verification

An email with a verification code has been sent to your email address.

Welcome to StockNews!

Create Your Account

Email Verification

An email with a verification code has been sent to your email address.