Oil prices stabilized on Friday and were set to end the week flat as the market balanced supply fears against renewed economic concerns in the US and China, according to Reuters.
Brent crude futures were down 5 cents, or 0.07 percent, at $74.93 a barrel by 11:45 a.m. GMT. West Texas Intermediate US crude futures were up 4 cents, or 0.06 percent, at $70.91.
Analysts forecast an emerging supply deficit for the second half of the year, pointing to a report from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries on Thursday, which said the producer group expects July-December demand for its own crude to be 90,000 barrels per day higher than previously projected.
“The oil market is barrelling toward a supply deficit, assuming OPEC delivers on its latest production cuts,” said PVM oil market analyst Stephen Brennock.
Commerzbank analysts, meanwhile, said that “the emerging sizeable supply deficit confirms our expectation of rising oil prices during the course of the year.”
OPEC kept its global oil demand forecast for 2023 unchanged on Thursday, expecting economic risks to be offset by higher Chinese demand growth.
“Traders are waiting for one of two events to dictate the path of travel going forward; another bank failure or an OPEC+ (OPEC and its allies) production cut,” said Craig Erlam, senior markets analyst at OANDA.
There is mounting concern that the US — the world’s biggest oil consumer — will enter recession, with talks over the government’s debt ceiling postponed and concern growing over another crisis-hit regional bank.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Friday said that the US faces financial and economic catastrophe if Congress fails to raise the debt ceiling.
And the US Federal Reserve will probably need to raise interest rates further if inflation stays high, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman said on Friday, adding that data this month has not convinced her that price pressures are receding.
Meanwhile, a decline in new loans to businesses in China and weaker economic data there earlier in the week refocused doubts about its recovery from COVID-19 restrictions driving oil demand growth.
China’s April consumer price data rose at a slower pace than in March, missing expectations, while deepening factory gate deflation suggested that more stimulus may be needed.
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