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Oil prices rally as Goldman Sachs’ $100 per barrel prediction becomes market focus

Oil prices

It looks like Goldman Sachs’ $100 per barrel prediction has begun to materialise as oil prices rally, despite data suggesting that prices ought to be trending downward. 

The rally comes despite the United States recording a huge increase in its crude oil stockpile, which should naturally see global prices decline.  

The U.S. benchmark, the West Texas Intermediate (WTI), gained 2.9% to trade at $77.30 per barrel and even hit a session high of $77.81. 

Meanwhile, the global benchmark, Brent, also gained 2.9%, to trade at $82.43, after an intraday high of $82.91. 

These gains come as bulls in the market bet on weakening rate hikes from sagging inflation and a Goldman Sachs’ call for a barrel to return to above $100 by the third quarter of this year. 

Before now: Both WTI and Brent fell by more than 8% last week in one of their worst openings for a year as the market tanked on concerns of a global recession and weak potential demand from top oil importer China despite Beijing’s determination to move on from its tough COVID-zero policy. 

What You Should Know: During Wednesday’s trading session, crude oil prices rallied as traders across markets bet on a sizable drop in inflation numbers in the December U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) report due on Thursday.  

What analysts are Saying: Analysts polled by U.S. media had expected a crude draw of around 2.2M barrels instead for last week. John Kilduff, founding partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital, explained:

The crude releases from the SPR, along with other global market developments, added to international oil supplies over the past year, slashing crude prices from a high of more than $130 a barrel in early March, right after the Ukraine invasion, to current levels of around $80 a barrel or below. Pump prices of gasoline in the United States have also tumbled from a record high of $5 a gallon in mid-June to a current average of under $3.30, data from the American Automobile Association showed. The slowdown in SPR draws came after the Biden administration said late last year that it was winding down its dependence on the reserve and was ready to add to its inventory. The administration is negotiating purchases with U.S. energy firms to refill the reserve, starting with a base offer of $70 per barrel. 

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