West Texas Intermediate (WTI), futures on NYMEX, are oscillating in a limited range above $72.00 in the late Asian session. The oil price is taking sufficient time required to digest demand catalysts belonging to the United States and China. Apart from that, investors are preparing for the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) interest rate policy for June.
Reading from US Energy Information Administration (EIA) about oil inventory data for the week ending June 02 showed a drawdown by 0.451M while the street was anticipating a build-up. Contrary to that, inventories of Gasoline and Distillate rose significantly higher than estimates, portraying a sharp decline in fuel demand.
Meanwhile, US factory activity has also remained weak in May as the US ISM agency reported a seventh straight contraction in the manufacturing sector, which brings in transparency that the oil demand in the US is extremely bleak.
Going forward, the focus will be on the Fed’s June policy. As per the CME Fedwatch tool, the chances of a steady interest rate decision have dropped to 67%, which is sufficient to trigger a risk-aversion theme.
On the China front, Trade Balance data dropped sharply to $65.81B vs. the estimates of $92B and the former release of $90.21B. Exports were sharply contracted by 7.5%, which indicates that consumers are shifting to other countries for outsourcing or the global demand is turning extremely weak. In all sense, demand for the oil price is getting vulnerable. It is highly likely that the impact of OPEC’s production cuts would wane as demand remains the major catalyst for analyzing the oil price.
Investors should note that China is the world’s biggest importer of oil and poor activity in China impact heavily on the oil price.