
Oil
Oil Price Ends Slide As Brent Trades $72.50 per barrel

After several tumultuous weeks, the downhill slide seems to have ended for crude oil futures, with ICE Brent trading relatively rangebound at $72.50 per barrel. Supply disruptions in Libya and the US Gulf of Mexico prevented concerns over China’s economy from triggering an even bigger slide and the US Federal Reserve’s much-anticipated interest rate cut could lift the market mood slightly higher.
Short positions held by hedge funds and other money managers in the ICE Brent futures contract surpassed long ones for the first time on record, with a net short of 12,680 contracts reflecting widespread concerns over Chinese demand and the US economy.
The new top financial officer of Brazil’s state oil firm Petrobras (NYSE:PBR) Fernando Melgarejo said the company’s new 2025-2029 strategic plan would have a more upstream-focused vision to prevent a decline in oil and gas reserves around 2030.
Oil and gas producers are resuming production in the US Gulf of Mexico with only 12% of output (and 24 platforms) shut in as of Monday, some 213,000 b/d, as peak closures reached 732,000 b/d last week or 42% of total offshore output.
Brazil’s government confirmed that it is in talks with mining giants Vale (NYSE:VALE) and BHP (NYSE:BHP) over a potential $18 billion payout for the deadly 2015 Brumadinho dam collapse, ending one of the most protracted mining litigations.
A Colombian court ordered the halt of drilling operations at the Uchuva-2 offshore well in the gas-rich and untapped offshore zone of the country, saying the operator Ecopetrol (NYSE:EC) failed to consult a local Indigenous community.
As Egypt seeks to cover its power needs amidst drastically declining domestic gas production, the country’s state energy firm EGPC has bought 20 LNG cargoes for the winter, the first such tender since 2018 when Zohr started to ramp up output.
US oil majors including ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) and Chevron (NYSE:CVX) defeated an appeal by consumers that accused them of colluding with former US President Donald Trump and OPEC+, citing a lack of proof of antitrust violations.
Saudi Arabia’s national oil firm Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) will lift its stake in LNG investment firm MidOcean Energy to 49%, co-owned with EIG, and also fund its acquisition of a new 15% stake in Peru LNG from Hunt Oil Company to bring its stake to 35%.
According to S&P Global, the relative scarcity of new gold discoveries since 2020 could lead to a gold production peak in 2026 at 110 million ounces, driven by Australia and Canada mostly, subsequently falling to 103 million ounces in 2028.
Following a visit of UAE top officials to India, the country’s oil company ADNOC is eyeing opportunities to expand its crude storage volumes in India’s underground SPR caverns as Delhi seeks to triple its reserves from the current 5.86 million barrels.
Germany’s Federal Network Agency stated it had awarded contracts for almost 3 GW of onshore wind energy in its latest annual auction, the highest volume ever, with the average awarded price reaching 7.33 €cent/KWh, a couple of cents below the maximum allowed limit.
One of the most coveted lithium reserves globally, Bolivia’s Salar de Uyuni will see increasing Russian involvement after the country’s lithium firm YLB signed a $976 million deal to build its first direct lithium extraction plant, with a capacity of 14ktpa.
The presidential office of South Sudan announced that the country and its northern neighbor Sudan have made headway in restarting the halted pipeline that brings its crude to the export markets, repairing damaged areas as government forces continue to clash with RSF forces.
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