
02 December 2021
Oil prices rose on Thursday, more than recouping the previous day's losses as investors adjusted ahead of OPEC + 's supply policy decision, but gains were capped amid concerns that the Omicron variant of the coronavirus would hurt fuel demand.
Brent crude futures are up $ 1.24, or 1.8%, to $ 70.11 by 0748 GMT, easing 0.5% in the previous session.
US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil futures rose $ 1.13, or 1.7%, to $ 66.70 a barrel after falling 0.9% on Wednesday.
“Investors have boosted their positions ahead of the OPEC + decision as oil prices have declined so quickly and so strongly over the past week,” said Tsuyoshi Ueno, senior economist at the NLI Research Institute.
World oil prices have lost more than $ 10 a barrel since last Thursday, when Omicron news first shocked investors.
“The market will closely follow the decision of the producer group, as well as the comments of some key members after the meeting, to propose their future policy,” Ueno said.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, collectively known as OPEC +, are likely to decide on Thursday whether to release more oil to the market, as previously planned, or restrict supplies.
Since August, the group has added an additional 400,000 barrels per day to global supply every month as it gradually crushes record cuts agreed in 2020.
The new option, however, has complicated the decision-making process, and some observers suggest that OPEC + may suspend these additions in January in an attempt to slow supply growth.
"Oil prices have risen as some investors expect OPEC + to decide to maintain current supply levels in January to mitigate any damage to demand from the spread of Omicron," said Toshitaka Tazawa, an analyst at Fujitomi Securities Co Ltd.
Concerns about the impact of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus have increased since the first case was reported in the United States and Japan's central bank warned of economic trouble as countries respond with tighter containment measures.
US Undersecretary for Energy David Turk said the administration of President Joe Biden could adjust the timing of the planned release of strategic crude oil reserves if world energy prices fall significantly.
Growth in oil markets was restrained on Thursday as weekly US stocks data showed that US crude stocks fell less-than-expected last week, while gasoline and distillate stocks rose much more-than-expected as demand has weakened.
Crude oil inventories are down 910,000 barrels in the week to November 26, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said, compared to analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll of 1.2 million barrels.
Go to all articles
18 November 2025
BTCC Exchange Supercharges Black Friday 2025 with 2 Million USDT in Rewards Plus Exclusive JJJ Signed Prizes
17 November 2025
ChatGPT's Crown Slips: How Gemini, Claude, and Grok Are Redefining AI Dominance in Business
14 November 2025
China Supreme Court Sets New Rules on Virtual Currency Cases
11 November 2025
Why Gold Is Surging Today? Metal Rises With Bitcoin Price
07 November 2025
Robinhood Posts Record Revenue and Deposits on Surging User Growth
04 November 2025
StarCompliance Study Finds UAE Firms Making Training and Competency Top Priorities
28 October 2025
China's DeepSeek and Alibaba's Qwen AI Beat Rivals in Crypto Trading Contest
21 October 2025
The Best Growth Stock to Invest $1,000 in Right Now
17 October 2025
MIT grad brothers' trial puts focus on 'Wild West of crypto'
10 October 2025
PayPay Takes Binance Japan Stake for Crypto, Boosting IPO Value
06 October 2025
The bitcoin exchange rate has updated its historical maximum and exceeded $125,000 for the first time
03 October 2025
Coinbase has integrated 1inch
Effective assistance on various aspects of your trading account and other financial activities related to trading on the broker's platform.