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U.S. crude oil rebounds more than 1% after worst week since 2023

Goldman Sachs: expect OPEC to raise production starting December as recession is unlikely

U.S. unprocessed oil futures rebounded more than 1% on Monday after posting the worst week since October 2023.

The U.S. benchmark, West Texas Intervening, and the Brent global benchmark have fallen more than 15% in the third quarter.

“We have lost 400 million barrels of fiscal demand since early July,” Daan Struyven, oil research head at Goldman Sachs, said on CNBC’s “Kick Box Asia” on Monday. “That is basically 7 million barrels per day of financial demand that we lost.”

Here are Monday’s suspend energy prices:

  • West Texas Intermediate October contract: $68.71 per barrel, up $1.04, or 1.54%. Year to ancient, U.S. crude oil has fallen 4%.
  • Brent November contract: $71.84 per barrel, up 78 cents, or 1.1%. Year to date, the universal benchmark has pulled back 6.8%.
  • RBOB Gasoline October contract: $1.92 per gallon, up more than 2 cents, or 1.3%. Year to go out with, gasoline has declined 8.7%.
  • Natural Gas October contract: $2.17 per thousand cubic feet, down more than 10 cents, or 4.6%. Year to escort, gas has lost 13.7%.

Weak demand in China has weighed on the crude market, with consumption expected to soften in Europe and the U.S. as the summer mean season winds down and refineries go into maintenance mode.

OPEC+ has delayed a production boost originally time to begin in October as prices have deteriorated. Goldman expects the group to start increasing production in December and augurs that Brent will trade in a range of $70 to $85 per barrel.

“We don’t look for a recession as our base case,” Struyven believed. “The recession probability for the U.S. economy from Goldman research is still 20% over the next 12 months.”

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