Commodities Week Ahead: Oil Glued To Trump-Iran Face Off; Gold Watches Fed

 | Jun 24, 2019 08:08

Donald Trump insists he wants no war but the Iranians are in no mood to negotiate, hoping to force the U.S. president to drop sanctions unconditionally. That puts traders in a spot on how to navigate one of the trickiest times ever in oil despite U.S. crude just having its best week since 2016 with a 9% gain.

Gold may also consolidate at around $1,400 per ounce, awaiting clues on a much-anticipated Fed rate cut.

With the run-up to the OPEC and G20 meetings upon the oil markets, few traders might want to risk putting new shorts on crude this week. The Saudi-Russian partnership could yield new restraints on oil production at the July 1-2 OPEC summit. And Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping might announce a preliminary trade deal before the G20 concludes in Osaka this week.

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Yet, these being extraordinary times for oil traders means bulls have to be hedged for the most unexpected of events. And that includes potential for another surprise build in weekly crude data released by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, and possible wavering by Fed bankers on a rate cut now widely expected by July.

While the EIA cited record U.S. gasoline demand in its dataset last week, a fire on Friday at a Philadelphia refining complex that makes a quarter of the region’s fuel products could distort the near term numbers on energy due from the agency.

And then, there’s weak global margins for refining, particularly in Asia, that’s weighing down the worldwide outlook for crude.

New York-based consultancy Energy Intelligence listed the varying themes in oil on Friday, particularly negative perceptions on the global economy and how those were impacting crude prices.

The group said softening global GDP was intensifying market fears that oil demand “might fall off a cliff”.