- December 13th, 2023
Oil prices hold near six-month lows
Oil prices edged up on Wednesday, but remained near the six-month lows reached in the previous session after a more than 3% drop, with investors concerned about oversupply and waning demand. ›
Oil prices edged up on Wednesday, but remained near the six-month lows reached in the previous session after a more than 3% drop, with investors concerned about oversupply and waning demand. ›
Oil prices rose on Monday, extending gains for a second session as U.S. efforts to replenish strategic reserves provided some support, although concerns of crude oversupply and softer fuel demand growth next year persisted. ›
LONDON, Dec 8 (Reuters) – Oil benchmarks were headed for a seventh straight weekly decline on worries over a global supply surplus and weak Chinese demand, although prices recovered ground on Friday after Saudi Arabia and Russia called for more OPEC+ members to join output cuts. ›
European natural gas prices gained for a second day as traders increased the pace of withdrawals from storage sites during the first major cold snap this winter. ›
Oil prices reclaimed some ground on Thursday after tumbling to a six-month low in the previous session but investors remained concerned about sluggish demand and economic slowdowns in the U.S. and China. ›
Oil prices were steady on Wednesday, as investors weighed the effectiveness of an extension in OPEC+ cuts in tightening supply against a worsening demand outlook in China. ›
European natural gas prices are barely reacting to a cold snap across Europe, suggesting traders are starting to shift focus to the next season. ›
Oil prices held steady on Tuesday amid uncertainty over voluntary output cuts by the OPEC+ group of producers, tensions in the Middle East and weak economic data from the U.S.. ›
European natural gas prices declined as persistent low demand for the fuel helps to preserve the region’s inventories. ›
Oil futures reversed course after rising briefly on Monday amid persistent pressure from the OPEC+ decision and uncertainty over global fuel demand growth, although the risk of supply disruptions from the Middle East conflict limited the losses. ›