2023–2025 world oil market chronology
So far in 2023, there has been no clear trend for oil prices, though concerns over U.S. interest rates have kept oil from rising as much as it could have.
2023
Both Brent and WTI started the year down more than 8 percent, the most for a first week since 2016. Brent finished at $78.57 and WTI at $73.77, after gaining 13 percent in the previous three weeks. U.S. jobs news indicated the economy was slowing, meaning less chance of another large interest rate increase, and the dollar jumped. The price of Saudi light crude sold to Asia fell to the lowest since November 2021.[1] Oil rose for the next two weeks, with Brent ending at $87.63 and WTI at $81.31, with loosening of restrictions in China a big reason, along with expectation of smaller interest rate increases. A lower oil rig count and the Russian cap also contributed, though U.S. crude inventories were the highest since June 2021.[2] For the week ending February 3, oil fell nearly 8 percent, with Brent at one point reaching $79.72, lowest since January 11, and WTI reaching $73.13, lowest since January 5. Both fell about 3 percent on February 3 with positive U.S. jobs news causing concerns about interest rate increases, even though the Federal Reserve raised rates less than it had been.[3] The next week oil rose over 8 percent, with Brent finishing at $86.39 and WTI at $79.72, as Russia announced production cuts. The European Union's cap and its ban on Russian oil were believed to have had influence, but gains were limited by low Chinese demand, increased U.S. unemployment claims and high inventories.[4] Positive U.S. economic news, higher U.S stockpiles and lower stock prices helped oil fall for a second week, with Brent hitting $84.18 and WTI at $77.52.[5] In spite of higher U.S. inventories, because of Russia's plans to decrease output, WTI climbed 2 percent to $75.39 on February 23 after falling for 6 straight days. Brent finished at $82.21, also up 2 percent.[6][7] At the end of February, U.S. crude exports reached a record due to the growing gap between WTI and Brent.[8]
In the first full week of March, oil fell 3 percent due to concerns about U.S. and European interest rates, though not as much as it could have due to good U.S. economic news, with Brent finishing at $82.68 and WTI at $76.68.[9] The next week, as a result of the March 2023 United States bank failures, Brent fell almost 12 percent to $72.97 a barrel, the most since December, and WTI fell 13 percent to $66.74, the most in a year.[10] Declines continued until both indexes reached their lowest point since 2021. The first quarter ended with the second week of gains, with lower supplies in some areas and U.S. inflation decreasing. Brent finished with the more actively traded futures at $79.89 down 5 percent for the month and WTI was up 9 percent for the week, but down 2 percent for the month, to $75.67.[11]
OPEC and others planned to decrease production, which caused prices to jump 6 percent April 3, but on April 5 there was little change with Brent finishing at $84.69 and WTI at $80.61 in spite of falling U.S. inventories, as U.S. job openings reached the lowest level in almost two years.[12] The week ending April 14 marked the fourth week of increases with Brent finishing up 1.5 percent for the week at $86.36 and WTI up 2.5 percent to $82.52. Factors included, unexpected production cuts by OPEC and others along with an International Energy Agency forecast of higher demand, as well as less concern about U.S. banks and a lower U.S. rig count.[13] Despite good economic news from Europe, Brent finished down 5 percent at $81.80 and WTI fell 6 percent to $78.55, with interest rate fears and higher U.S. unemployment claims as major factors. At the end of the fourth straight down month and the second week of declines, Brent finished at $80.33, while WTI finished up for the month for the first time in six months at $76.78. Recession fears and concern over banks outweighed the lowest U.S. crude production since November and the highest demand for fuel since December.[14][15]
The first week of May was the third down week, which had not happened since November, due to concerns about U.S. banks and another interest rate increase. Brent finished at $75.30 and WTI, after reaching levels not seen since 2021, rebounded to $71.34.[16] Oil fell again the next week, with Brent finishing at $74.17 and WTI at $70.04, with a strong dollar and concerns about the U.S. debt ceiling as major factors, plus fears of a recession and its effect on demand.[17]
See also
References
- Scott Disavino (January 6, 2023). "Oil settles flat, with weekly decline on recession worries". Reuters.
- Laila Kearney (January 20, 2023). "Oil up more than 1% on U.S. inflation data, demand optimism". Reuters.
- Stephanie Kelly (February 3, 2023). "Oil falls about 3% as strong U.S. jobs data prompt interest rate concerns". Reuters.
- Stephanie Kelly (February 10, 2023). "Oil prices rise over 2% on Russian plan to cut output". Reuters.
- Yuka Obayashi and Sudarshan Varadhan (February 17, 2023). "Oil prices on track to finish week 2.5% lower on U.S. rate hike worries". Reuters.
- Chibuike Oguh (February 23, 2023). "Stocks, crude oil advances despite higher interest rate expectations". Reuters.
- Laila Kearney (February 24, 2023). "Oil flat on week as U.S. inventories rise but Russia cuts supply". Reuters.
- Laura Sanicola (March 1, 2023). "Oil settled up as rising supplies face Chinese demand hopes". Reuters.
- Arathy Somasekhar (March 10, 2023). "Oil prices rise after buoyant U.S. payrolls". Reuters.
- Laura Sanicola (March 17, 2023). "Oil prices settle down, post big weekly losses on bank fears". Reuters.
- Shariq Khan (March 31, 2023). "Oil settles 1% higher on tightening supplies, cooling US inflation". Reuters.
- Laura Sanicola (April 5, 2023). "Oil steadies as economic fears counter OPEC+ cuts, US stock draw". Reuters.
- Laura Sanicola (April 14, 2023). "Oil rises, logs weekly gains after IEA predicts record demand". Reuters.
- Rowena Edwards (April 21, 2023). "Oil set for weekly loss as economic uncertainty weighs". Reuters.
- Scott Disavino (April 28, 2023). "Crude prices up over 2% on rising U.S. oil demand and lower output". Reuters.
- Arathy Somasekhar (May 5, 2023). "Oil prices jump but post third straight weekly fall on economic woes". Reuters.
- Laura Sanicola (May 12, 2023). "Oil prices fall on stronger dollar, demand fears". Reuters.