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伦敦 - 在美国收紧对俄罗斯原油出口的制裁计划后,周五油价飙升逾 3 美元,引发了本已紧张的市场的供应担忧,预计全球库存将在第四季度下降。

美国制裁导致石油价格飙升,库存预测紧张 - 石油和天然气 360

资料来源:路透社

截至 GMT 1311,布伦特原油 期货上涨 3.30 美元,至每桶 89.30 美元。美国西德克萨斯中质原油 (WTI) 原油在早些时候突破 4 美元大关后上涨 3.32 美元,至每桶 86.23 美元。

周四,美国首次对运载价格高于七国集团每桶 60 美元上限的俄罗斯石油的油轮船东实施制裁,以堵住旨在惩罚莫斯科入侵乌克兰的机制中的漏洞。

俄罗斯是世界第二大石油生产国和主要出口国,美国对其运输进行更严格的审查可能会减少供应。

尽管本周两个原油基准均出现波动,但布伦特原油周涨幅预计将超过 5%,而 WTI 本周预计将上涨约 4%,此前两者均在周一大幅上涨。

上周末,激进伊斯兰组织哈马斯对以色列发动袭击,威胁引发更广泛的冲突,导致中东出口可能受到干扰,从而推动了这一增长。

OANDA 驻新加坡高级市场分析师 Kelvin Wong 表示,“地缘政治风险溢价仍然存在,这可能会在短期内支撑油价。”

Wong表示,市场最担心的是中东和俄罗斯的供应限制。

但德国商业银行(ETR: CBKG)分析师Thu Lan Nguyen和Carsten Fritsch在一份研究报告中表示,迄今为止,中东冲突对原油价格的影响有限。

他们表示,“到目前为止,还没有迹象表明该地区主要产油国将直接卷入军事冲突,这将严重限制  这些国家的原油产量。”

同样在周四,石油输出国组织(OPEC)维持对全球石油需求增长的预测,理由是今年迄今为止世界经济有弹性的迹象,并预计全球最大石油进口国中国的需求进一步增长。

澳新银行高级大宗商品策略师丹尼尔·海因斯(Daniel Hynes)周五在一份报告中表示,“供应面问题仍然是原油市场的焦点”,并补充称,由于美国制裁力度加大,周五早盘价格上涨。

欧佩克表示预计本季度原油库存将减少 3(百万桶/日),这也提振了市场情绪。海因斯说,这是假设以色列与哈马斯战争不会造成进一步的供应中断。

周五公布的数据显示中国原油进口量环比下降,油价也没有受到影响。

 


原文链接/oilandgas360

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LONDON -Oil prices leapt more than $3 on Friday after the U.S. tightened its sanctions programme against Russian crude exports, raising supply concerns in an already tight market, with global inventories forecast to decline through the fourth quarter.

Oil surges on US sanctions, tight stockpile forecasts- oil and gas 360

Source: Reuters

Brent futures rose $3.30 to $89.30 per barrel as of 1311 GMT. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude gained $3.32 to $86.23 a barrel, after earlier breaking the $4 barrier.

On Thursday, the U.S. imposed the first sanctions on owners of tankers carrying Russian oil priced above the G7’s price cap of $60 a barrel, to close loopholes in the mechanism designed to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine.

Russia is the world’s second-largest oil producer and a major exporter and the tighter U.S. scrutiny of its shipments could curtail supply.

Despite fluctuations through the week in both crude benchmarks, Brent was set for a weekly gain of more than 5%, while WTI was set to climb roughly 4% for the week, after both surged on Monday.

That uptick was driven by the potential for disruptions to Middle Eastern exports after the weekend attack by militant Islamist group Hamas on Israel threatened a wider conflict.

“(A) geopolitical risk premium still lingers around the corner that is likely to support oil prices in the short-term,” said Kelvin Wong, senior markets analyst at OANDA in Singapore.

The market was most concerned about supply constraints from the Middle East and Russia, said Wong.

But the conflict in the Middle East has so far had a restrained impact on crude prices, said Commerzbank (ETR:CBKG) analysts Thu Lan Nguyen and Carsten Fritsch in a research note.

“There has been no sign so far that the leading oil producing countries in the region will become directly involved in the military conflict, which would threaten to considerably restrict the crude oil output of these countries,” they said.

Also on Thursday, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) kept its forecast for growth in global oil demand, citing signs of a resilient world economy so far this year and expected further demand gains in China, the world’s biggest oil importer.

“Supply side issues remained the focus in the crude oil market,” Daniel Hynes, senior commodity strategist at ANZ, said in a note on Friday, adding that prices during early trade on Friday rose on the stronger U.S. sanctions enforcement.

“Sentiment was also boosted after OPEC said it expects crude stockpiles to slump by 3 (million barrels per day) this quarter. That assumes that there are no further supply disruptions emanating from the Israel-Hamas war,” Hynes said.

Oil prices also shrugged off data released on Friday showing a month-on-month decline in Chinese crude imports.