Commodities Week Ahead: Trump And The Oil Market - Part 2

 | Apr 06, 2020 21:37

Investing.com’s Commodities Week Ahead typically looks at the prospects for oil and gold prices in the upcoming trading week. In this two-part series, however, which began on Sunday, we examined the Trump administration's attempts to save the U.S. oil industry amid the collapse in demand for crude from the coronavirus crisis and the production-and-price war between market titans Saudi Arabia and Russia. Read part 1 here.

We continue with that theme in this final installment, and also explore the economic and longer-term conditions required for the market’s comeback:

If you thought oil would go to $40 this week because Donald Trump could make the Saudis and Russians cut millions of barrels of production simply by asking or threatening them in order to save U.S. shale crude,  please push the reset button in your head.

Going from a “not thinking about it” stance on Friday, to a “will do whatever I have to do” mode by Saturday, before shifting tack again to a "if the oil price stays the way it is” posture by Sunday, the U.S. president was as ambivalent as he could be on his threat to tax Saudi and Russian crude to protect domestic drillers.

After U.S. West Texas Intermediate gained a record 32% last week and U.K. Brent 37% on Trump’s tweets that Riyadh and Moscow could remove 15 million barrels per day from a globally oversupplied pool because of his calls to their leaders, both fell in Asian trading Monday as it became clear the market was chasing a red herring.