Commodities Week Ahead: Dark Clouds Over Oil; Gold At A Crossroads

 | Sep 28, 2020 10:29

From OPEC, the oil exporters’ cartel, to Vitol, the energy trading powerhouse, the verdict seems to be the same: dark clouds are gathering over the crude market.

What isn’t clear is what downside this will have on prices in the near-term.

It’s a similar predicament for gold: the yellow metal is near two-month lows with charts indicating further weakness. Yet, with the dollar looking like it could give back some of its mind-blowing strength of the past two weeks, there’s no telling how far down the tape gold could go. 

Two wildcards this week for macro/gold trades: the first debate on Tuesday between President Donald Trump and his challenger Joe Biden for the Nov. 3 presidential election, and Friday’s nonfarm payrolls for August.

As though that wasn’t enough, U.S. CFTC data released Friday showed speculators held a big net short position in the greenback, near its highest levels in almost a decade. 

Gold chartist Dhwani Mehta said in a post on FXStreet:

“Risk sentiment and U.S. dollar dynamics will continue to play out, in the face of the looming coronavirus risks and U.S. fiscal stimulus uncertainty,”

suggesting a test of the critical $1,863 barrier for the yellow metal.

OPEC Sees Higher Supply Near-Term /h2

But back to oil: Mohammad Barkindo, secretary-general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, said, in remarks at the G20 Energy Ministers virtual meeting that commercial oil stocks in the developed world could stay well above the five-year average in the third quarter of this year.

“The expected supply and demand balance would result in OECD commercial stocks standing well above the latest five-year average in Q3/2020,”

Barkindo said, referring to oil inventories in rich countries grouped under the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. 

The OPEC secretary-general, however, expects OECD crude stocks to fall in the fourth quarter, to reach around 123 million barrels, or just above the five-year average.

Vitol Rules Q4 Rally In Oil/h2

Vitol, the world's biggest independent oil trader, sees little scope for an oil rally in the fourth quarter as global demand was slowing due to new coronavirus-related restrictions, according to Bloomberg. Vitol Group executive committee member, Chris Bake said:

"The conventional wisdom going into the fourth quarter was that things were going to improve.....it doesn't feel like we have a huge catalyst and demand is more uncertain."

Several European countries have recently reimposed restrictions on travel and social gathering due to a resurgence of coronavirus cases across the continent.  

Crude prices logged their third weekly loss in four on Friday, as analysts warned of a gloomier near term for the market after an unexpected surge in production in politically-liberated Libya added to concerns about demand.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, the key indicator for U.S. crude price, settled the week down  2.1%. By 1:38 PM in Singapore (5:39 GMT), WTI was off by another 1.2%, or 45 cents, at $39.80 per barrel.

London-traded brent crude, the global benchmark for oil, was down 44 cents, or 1%, at $41.97. by 2:45 PM ET (18:45 GMT). Last week, brent lost 3%.

Since the mid-September OPEC+ meeting that more or less reaffirmed production cuts till the year-end, crude prices have been pulled both ways.