West Texas Intermediate (WTI), futures on NYMEX, have extended their Tokyo gains above $85.00 and are oscillating above the same comfortably. The oil prices are still inside the woods, auctioning in a charted territory of $83.56-86.15 from Monday’s trading session.
The reason behind a rebound in oil prices could be tagged to a decline in the US dollar index (DXY), however, the rebound move could get faded amid the presence of multiple headwinds.
Signs of recession in the US economy are bolstering as the Federal Reserve (Fed) is on its way to tighten policy further to achieve its agenda of bringing price stability. Earlier, rate hikes by the Fed have done little in softening the price pressures. Therefore, the confidence lies in further deterioration of growth prospects rather than a slowdown in the price rise index.
Apart from that, a shift of J.P. Morgan liquidity from delivery equity to underweight bonds has undermined the equity class, reported Reuters. A drop in preference for equity doesn’t resemble a condition of a blissful economy.
On the supply front, US President Joe Biden's administration has announced an oil release from its emergency reserve to balance out the demand-supply mechanism. The US economy will release 10-15 million oil barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) this week.
Apart from that, the continuation of a no-tolerance approach towards Covid-19 by China has kept a lid on the oil demand.