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The US Department of Energy said on Friday it awarded supply contracts to five companies to deliver 3.1 million barrels of crude oil to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in August at an average price of $73 per barrel.
The DOE had announced the purchase plan in May as a step to refill the emergency stockpile after a record release following Russia's invasion of Ukraine last year.
"These 3 million barrels are being purchased for an average price of about $73 per barrel, lower than the average of about $95 per barrel that SPR crude was sold for in 2022, securing a good deal for taxpayers," the DOE said in a press release.
The energy sector is off to a lower start, pressured by weakness in oil futures. The major market futures inched higher this morning as investors brace themselves for inflation data as well as Fed, ECB and BoJ interest rate decisions later this week.
WTI and Brent crude oil futures are extending last week’s losses and are sharply lower as investors attempt to gauge the Federal Reserve’s appetite for further rate hikes against supply concerns and the prospect of higher Chinese demand. A stronger dollar ahead of this month’s Fed meeting is putting additional pressure on energy contracts. Today’s drop in prices has pushed Brent and NYMEX benchmarks to one-month lows.
Natural gas futures are down as prelim estimates for EIA storage data (week-ending 9-Jun) had a build of +95 to +105 Bcf vs the 5-yr average of +84 Bcf. However, forecasts are expected to be warmer than normal in the middle of the US, especially Texas and Louisiana.
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