Following the menacing national address, West Texas Crude (WTI) spiked by 3.2% touching as high as $86.62 per barrel, over fears that these developments will lead to tighter oil and gas supply. While the European Union banned seaborne imports of Russian crude from December 5, further tightening of supply could lead to demand destruction. Giovanni Staunovo a commodity analyst at UBS Group stated “supply disruption concerns are supporting oil.” Further, Saudi Aramco CEO recently claimed that the main culprit for high energy prices is under-investment in oil and gas exploration and production, not just the war in Ukraine.
Knee jerk reaction
Putin’s speech represents a ratcheting up of the war effort in Ukraine, where over the past weeks the Ukrainian army reclaimed vast swaths of territory. Meanwhile, Vandana Hari, founder of Vanda Insights in Singapore commented on the WTI move caused by Putin’s speech. Furthermore, OPEC+, an organization of the petroleum exporting countries and associations including Russia, is producing 3.58 million barrels less per day compared to their production targets, indicating an underlying tightness of supply.
More tightening
With a tight oil supply, additional troops invading Ukraine, and energy prices spiking across Europe, it is easy to imagine inflation continuing to linger or even increase. Finally, this could promp the Federal Reserve (Fed) and other central banks around the world to continue their rate hike cycles to rein in inflation. On the old continent, countries like Germany and France are scrambling to sign LNG and electricity deals with Qatar, Italy is looking to North Africa and Portugal across the globe for alternative gas suppliers. With already high expectations of a cold and expensive winter in Europe, the national address by Russia’s president seemed to have confirmed Europe’s worst fears. Buy stocks now with Interactive Brokers – the most advanced investment platform Disclaimer: The content on this site should not be considered investment advice. Investing is speculative. When investing, your capital is at risk.