Benchmark U.S. crude oilfor December delivery fell $1.60to $76.66 per barrel Wednesday. Brent crudefor January delivery fell $1.29 to $81.18 per barrel.
Wholesale gasoline for December delivery fell 2 cents to $2.20 a gallon. December heating oilrose 3 cents to $2.87 a gallon. December natural gasrose 8 centsto $3.19 per 1,000 cubic feet.
Stocks end higher, extending rally on another round of subdued inflation data
Stocks finished higher Wednesday, building on a blockbuster rally...
Stocks finished higher Wednesday, building on a blockbuster rally the previous session, as investors weighed another round of subdued inflation data. The October producer price index showed a decline in the headline figures, while the core reading, which strips out food and energy, rose 0.1%, down from a 0.3% gain in September. Stocks surged Tuesday, with the S&P 500 posting its largest, one-day percentage gain since Jan. 6 and finishing at a two-month high after a subdued consumer price index reading saw investors largely conclude the Federal Reserve’s rate-hiking cycle has come to an end and price in a series of 2024 rate cuts. The Dow DJIAon Wednesday rose around 164 points, or 0.5%, to close near 34,991, according to preliminary data, while the S&P 500 SPX rose 0.2% and the Nasdaq CompositeCOMP gained 0.1%.
Crude oil inventories in the United States rose again this week, adding 1.335 million barrels...
Crude oil inventories in the United States rose again this week, adding 1.335 million barrels into inventory for the week ending November 10, according to The American Petroleum Institute (API), after an 11.9-million-barrel rise in crude inventories in the week prior, API data showed. Analysts had expected a 1.4 million barrel build.
API data now shows a net build in crude oil inventories in the United States of 11.9 million barrels so far this year.
Energy stocks are off to a mixed start, pressured by weakness in the crude complex, but supported by gains in the major equity futures.U.S. stocks are set to start today’s session higher as investors digest October’s PPI print, which fell by 0.5%, to mark its biggest monthly drop since April 2020.
WTI and Brent crude oil futures are in negative territory on signs the United States is at peak production and a stronger dollar, which offset strong economic data from China. In October, China’s manufacturing and retail sales growth beat expectations which eased concerns about waning demand. However, a full post-COVID economic recovery has been limited to weakness in the property sector. Investors will be keeping an eye on today’s DOE Weekly Petroleum Status Report as last night’s API print showed a weekly crude build of 1.8M barrels.
Natural gas futures have recovered yesterday’s declines this morning on the forecast for colder temperatures and higher heating demand than previously expected.
The House passed a funding bill to avert a government shutdown
More than two-thirds of the House ...
More than two-thirds of the House voted in support of new Speaker Mike Johnson’s unique two-step plan to fund the government for the next few months. Johnson needed Democrats’ help since the GOP’s right-wing Freedom Caucus—which helped orchestrate the ouster of previous Speaker Kevin McCarthy—came out against the bill for not including spending cuts. Luckily, Dems gave their okay for that exact reason. It’s not a done deal yet: The short-term funding bill now heads to the Senate, where it must pass by Friday to prevent a shutdown. Senate leaders in both parties have said they’ll support it.