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Market Close: Nov 03 Mixed, Diesel Up 18.79, Gas DN 1/3 penny,

Fueling Strategy: Keep tanks topped today, tonight before 23:00 have tanks full of fuel, Friday prices will go UP 5 cents, Saturday prices will go up 19 cents~Be Safe

NMEX Crude     $ 88.95 DN $1.8300

NYMEX ULSD    $3.8653 UP $0.1879

NYMEX Gas      $2.6939 DN $0.0033

NEWS

Oil settled lower on Thursday, with U.S. prices posting their first loss in three sessions on as fears that aggressive monetary tightening by the Federal Reserve will tip the economy into recession.

Price action

  • West Texas Intermediate crude for December delivery fell $1.83, or 2%, to settle at $88.17 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after ending Wednesday at $90 — the highest front-month finish since Oct. 10.
  • January Brent crude BRN00 the global benchmark, was down $1.49, or nearly 1.6%, at $94.67 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe.
  • Back on Nymex, December gasoline fell 0.1% to $2.6939 a gallon, while December heating oil added 5.1% at $3.8653 a gallon.
  • December natural gas dropped 4.7% to $5.975 per million British thermal units after climbing by 9.7% on Wednesday.

Market drivers

Concerns that the Fed is “much more likely to overshoot on rates rather than doing too little” have grown, raising the risk of the economy “tipping” into recession, said Robbie Fraser, manager, global research and analytics at Schneider Electric.That’s a particularly “bearish prospect for crude prices due to the potential demand hit, and is further reinforced by the stronger dollar that weighs on dollar-denominated crude prices,” he said in daily commentary.

The Fed on Wednesday raised its key interest rate by 75 basis points, or 0.75 percentage points, as expected, delivering a policy statement that was interpreted as a signal that the size of rate increases would likely fall at the December meeting.  Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, in a subsequent new conference, said that while smaller rate rises may be in store in future meetings, it was premature to talk about a pause in rate increases and that the peak in rates would be higher than Fed officials previously thought and that rates would likely remain high for a long period, while the path to a “soft landing” for the economy had narrowed due to persistently high inflation.

The dollar rose sharply in the wake of the Fed’s decision, with the ICE U.S. Dollar Index a measure of the currency against a basket of six major rivals, up 1.4%. The index is up nearly 18% year to date. A stronger dollar is seen as a negative for commodities priced in the unit, making them more expensive to users of other currencies.

Still, Tyler Richey, co-editor of Sevens Report Research, pointed out that oil has been trending higher in recent weeks. It’s found support amid “renewed hopes that China’s economy will reopen in the months ahead, rising geopolitical tensions surrounding the Ukraine war as well as in the Middle East,” and prospects of a standing bid from the Energy Department in the $70 a barrel range as the U.S. government looks to replenish the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, he said. “An uncertain global economic outlook, and more specifically increasingly pressing recession worries, are for now keeping WTI prices capped in the low $90s, but due to supply concerns, there are emerging risks of an upside move as we approach the end of the year,” Richey said.

Have a Great Day,

Loren R Bailey, President

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Categories: Fuel News
loren: Fuel Manager Services Inc. "Serving the trucking industry since 1992" I've been in and around the trucking industry for 45-years beginning in owner operator operations at Willis Shaw Express. I bought a small trucking company that I ran for 6-years then sold and went to work for J.B. Hunt Transport in 1982. After 10-years with Hunt, I started Fuel Manager Services, Inc., we are in our 29th year of serving the American trucking companies. Our simple goal was and is to bridge the gap between the trucking companies and the fuel suppliers.