Oil Steadies, But For How Long?

 | Jun 22, 2017 10:20AM ET

We’re seeing risk aversion in the markets once again on Thursday, with US futures currently slightly in the red, gold adding to recent gains and the yen edging higher.h3 Traders Continue to Test the Resolve of Oil Producers/h3

After falling into bear market territory – having fallen more than 20% from a recent peak – oil appears to have found some support on Thursday, buoyed by Wednesday’s inventory data from EIA which reported a 2.451 million reduction in stocks. The number was roughly in line with that reported by API the day before but traders still appear a little unconvinced by these and tend to wait for the EIA release. While this has offered some near-term support, there’s little reason at the moment to believe that oil isn’t headed for further losses.

Traders appear to be testing the resolve of those countries that signed up to the production cut, having been clearly disappointed with the decision not to deepen the cuts on top of extending them by nine months. Oil is currently trading at seven month lows despite a commitment from a number of producers to bring the market back into balance.

Ten of the last 11 inventory reports from EIA have been drawdowns and yet, traders appear unconvinced, with rising output in the US, Nigeria and Libya being touted as the reason behind this. Regardless of what’s driving these moves, the real question is how much more producers will stomach before they consider deepening the cuts?

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