Oil Updates – prices set to end week higher after US rate cut

Brent futures, were trading 26 cents or 0.4 percent lower at $73.62 a barrel at 8:27 a.m. Saudi time. Shutterstock
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SINGAPORE: Oil prices, which eased on Friday, were on track to end higher for a second straight week following a large cut in US interest rates and declining global stockpiles.

Brent futures, which were trading 26 cents or 0.4 percent lower at $73.62 a barrel at 8:27 a.m. Saudi time on Friday, gained 4.3 percent this week.

US WTI crude futures, which were down 15 cents, or 0.2 percent at $71.80 a barrel, registered weekly gains of 4.8 percent.

The benchmarks have been recovering after they fell to near three year-lows on Sept. 10, and have registered gains in five of the seven sessions since then.

Prices pared some gains on Friday, after rising more than 1 percent on Thursday following the US central bank’s decision to cut interest rates by half a percentage point on Wednesday. Interest rate cuts typically boost economic activity and energy demand, but some also it as a sign of a weak US labor market.

“Prices had been under pressure in recent months amid concerns demand would weaken, as tight monetary policies stifled economic activity,” analysts at ANZ Research said in a note.

“Easing monetary policy helped reinforce expectations that the US economy will avoid a downturn,” ANZ said.

Also supporting prices were a decline in US crude inventories, which fell to a one-year low last week.

A counter-seasonal oil market deficit of around 400,000 barrels per day will support Brent crude prices in the $70 to $75 a barrel range during the next quarter, Citi analysts said on Thursday, but added prices could plunge in 2025.

Crude prices were also being supported by rising tensions in the Middle East. Walkie-talkies used by Lebanese armed group Hezbollah exploded on Wednesday following similar explosions of pagers the previous day.

Security sources said Israeli spy agency Mossad was responsible, but Israeli officials did not comment on the attacks.

Weak demand from China’s slowing economy was weighing on prices, with refinery output in China slowing for a fifth month in August. China’s industrial output growth also slowed to a five-month low last month, and retail sales and new home prices weakened further.