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Otis made landfall near the resort city of Acapulco on the southern Pacific Coast of Mexico as a Category 5 hurricane around 1 a.m. local time.
The storm grew very strong very quickly. Forecasters said it had “explosively intensified” by 110 miles per hour in 24 hours, far surpassing the standard definition of rapid intensification, which is when a storm grows by 35 m.p.h. in 24 hours.
⚠️ Esta hora, #Otis se degradó a #Huracán categoría 1 en tierra sobre #Guerrero.
Toda la información en ⬇️https://t.co/VVYNAkgh8w pic.twitter.com/mYC2ynAnNy
— CONAGUA Clima (@conagua_clima) October 25, 2023
The energy sector is off to a slightly higher start, supported by an uptick in oil futures. Meanwhile, the major equity futures are mixed as Wall Street digests fresh earnings reports. Within energy, investors are digesting Q3 results from E&Ps and oilfield services.
Following three consecutive sessions of losses, WTI and Brent crude oil futures are edging higher as concerns over escalating tensions in the Middle East offset global demand worries related to the economic outlook in Europe. U.S. and Saudi Arabia leaders on Tuesday discussed efforts to prevent the conflict from widening to potentially include major oil producer Iran. Meanwhile, recent manufacturing and services activity data from Europe served as a reminder that a weak macroeconomic backdrop may potentially impact oil demand. Markets will also be keeping an eye out for EIA data due later this morning, as yesterday’s API figures showed a draw of 2.7 million barrels last week.
Natural gas futures are extending weekly gains on forecasts for cooler weather next week that should increase heating demand.
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