Oil prices climb strongly; healthy US retail sales point to demand resilience

August 15, 2024 11:08 PM AEST | By Investing
 Oil prices climb strongly; healthy US retail sales point to demand resilience

Investing.com-- Oil prices rose Thursday as the prospect of improving demand through lower U.S. interest rates helped traders look past growing concerns over weaker demand.

At 09:05 ET (13:05 GMT), Brent oil futures rose 1% to $80.52 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose 1% to $77.78 a barrel.

CPI, retail sales data in focus

Softer-than-expected consumer price index inflation data on Wednesday ramped up hopes that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by at least 25 basis points in September.

Additionally, U.S. retail sales rose by a larger than expected amount in July, pointing to resilience in consumer spending activity and the potential of a soft landing.

Retail sales rose by 1% last month, more than the expected 0.4% growth, accelerating from an unchanged reading in June, according to Commerce Department data released earlier Thursday.

The prospect of lower rates spurred some bets that U.S. economic conditions will improve in the coming months, helping buoy demand in the world’s biggest fuel consumer.

Mixed Chinese economic readings offer some support

A slew of economic readings from China offered some positive cues to oil markets on Thursday.

Retail sales grew more than expected in July, with the increase coming after Beijing rolled out a slew of rate cuts and measures aimed at boosting consumption.

But Chinese industrial production grew less than expected, as did fixed asset investment. China’s unemployment rate also unexpectedly rose.

Slowing Chinese demand has been a key source of anxiety for crude markets, especially as the country struggles with a dwindling economic recovery.

Oil nurses losses after surprise build in US inventories

Oil prices slid on Wednesday after government data showed an unexpected build in U.S. inventories, by about 1.4 million barrels, against expectations for a draw of 1.9 mb.

While gasoline and distillate inventories still saw strong draws, the build in overall inventories- the first weekly build in seven- spurred fears that the travel-heavy summer season was winding down.

The build in inventories also came as the OPEC and the IEA both trimmed their outlook for oil demand growth in 2024, citing concerns over slowing demand in top oil importer in China.

(Ambar Warrick contributed to this article.)

This article first appeared in Investing.com


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