Oil Wavers With Risk-Off Mood Outweighing China Rebound Hopes

Oil struggled to find direction as broader market concerns countered hopes for a big rebound in Chinese demand.

(Bloomberg) — Oil struggled to find direction as broader market concerns countered hopes for a big rebound in Chinese demand.

West Texas Intermediate traded near $80 a barrel. Disappointing tech earnings dragged markets lower, while weaker business activity reinforced Wall Street worries about the US economy. The dour outlook comes after China’s reopening spurred some gains in the commodity.

Oil markets “are coming undone a little bit,” said Bob Yawger, director of the futures division at Mizuho Securities USA. Economic concerns combined with swelling US crude inventories are weighing on the commodity, he said. While US supplies rose by less than expected last week, they remain at the highest level since June, according to government data released Wednesday.

Oil is largely unchanged for the month after a weak start to the year. The outlook for China and a weaker dollar — which makes commodities priced in the currency more attractive — have helped oil claw back some ground. Traders will be closely watching signs of increasing Chinese demand once the lunar New Year festivities have concluded.

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