NEW YORK: Oil settled lower for a fifth straight session on Thursday (Dec 8) on the prospect of a major crude pipeline resuming service, which would return a hefty amount of crude to the market at a time when global economic slowdowns are raising fuel demand fears.

Brent crude settled at US$76.15 (RM335.21) a barrel, losing US$1.02, or 1.3%. US West Texas Intermediate crude settled at US$71.46 (RM314.56) a barrel, shedding 55 cents, or 0.8%.

“I would tend to think that, any minute here, you’re going to see a headline hit the tape that’s going to say that Keystone is going to be back sooner rather than later,” said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho here.

Canada's TC Energy said it shut its 622,000-barrel-per-day Keystone pipeline, which is the primary line shipping heavy Canadian crude from Alberta to the US Midwest and Gulf Coast, after a spill into a Kansas creek.

Oil prices rose after the company announced the closure, which occurred on Wednesday Canadian time. Although TC Energy has not announced when the pipeline would reopen, the market sentiment has since shifted.

“We’re back looking at the demand outlook,” said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLC in New York.

The energy markets are weighed down by fears of an economic slowdown, weakening fuel demand amid the prospect of more US interest rate increases, with the Federal Reserve widely expected to raise interest rates by 50 basis points next week.

While US crude inventories fell last week, petrol and distillate inventories surged, adding to concern about easing demand.

Limiting losses was an announcement by China on Wednesday detailing the most sweeping changes to its strict anti-Covid regime since the pandemic began, while at least 20 oil tankers faced delays in crossing to the Mediterranean from Russia’s Black Sea ports.

The 14-day relative strength index for Brent was below 30 on Thursday according to Eikon data, a level taken by technical analysts as indicating an asset is oversold and could be poised for a rebound.

Both Brent and US crude hit 2022 lows on Wednesday, unwinding all the gains made after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine exacerbated the worst global energy supply crisis in decades and sent oil close to its all-time high of US$147.

Western officials were in talks with Turkish counterparts to resolve the tanker queues, a British Treasury official said on Wednesday, after the Group of Seven and the European Union rolled out new restrictions aimed at Russian oil exports.

The queues suggest that “available supply from the Black Sea is already affected by the punitive measure”, said Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM.

“In a healthy economic climate, such a development would be the equivalent of firing the starting gun in the race back to US$100.” – Reuters

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