Oil slipped from its highest level in almost 10 months after an industry report pointed to an increase in U.S. crude stockpiles, taking some of the steam out of a vaccine and stimulus-driven rally. Futures dropped toward $47 a barrel in New York after the American Petroleum Institute reported crude inventories climbed by 1.97 million barrels last week, according to people familiar with the data. That would be a second weekly gain if confirmed by official government figures on Wednesday.
In Asia, meanwhile, a rally in the physical market is gathering pace as buyers snap up barrels at higher prices. However, the demand recovery is looking uneven with China’s daily oil refining rising to a record last month, but South Korea’s crude imports falling to a 10-year low and predicted to drop further. Indian diesel sales also slid in the first half of December from a month earlier.
“There’s a huge risk to the vaccine rally, we are at peak vaccine optimism,” said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets Asia Pacific in Sydney. Oil may face further headwinds from a stronger U.S. dollar or a breakdown in the OPEC+ output agreement, he said.
Crude has climbed 2.3% over the past two sessions to the highest level since February as the U.S. Congress moved toward a stimulus package and as the nation started delivering the first doses of a coronavirus vaccine.
PRICES
West Texas Intermediate for January delivery fell 0.5% to $47.39 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 7:35 a.m. London time after gaining 1.3% on Tuesday.
Brent for February settlement slipped 0.4% to $50.55 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange after rising 0.9% in the previous session to close at the highest since early March.
Brent’s prompt timespread was 5 cents a barrel in backwardation, compared with 9 cents a week earlier.