Oil prices weakened on Thursday (October 2), extending their decline into a fourth day on concerns about oversupply in the market. Brent crude futures fell 37 cents, or 0.6%, to $64.98 a barrel at 11:27 GMT. Earlier in the session, prices hit their lowest level since June. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude fell 36 cents, or 0.6%, to $61.42 a barrel. The U.S. government shutdown raised uncertainty about the global economic outlook, while expectations of increased production by OPEC+, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allied producers, weighed on sentiment,...
Gold rallied – after a five-day rally that reached a new record – as the US government shutdown deepened and traders increased bets on a Federal Reserve interest rate cut following weak private payroll data. Gold traded near $3,880 an ounce, about $15 below its high reached on Wednesday, with the suspension of federal operations threatening to delay crucial economic data needed by the Fed to make interest rate decisions. This has left economists, traders, and policymakers more reliant on non-government data, such as Wednesday's ADP Research report, which showed a sharp decline in private...
The dollar weakened near a one-week low on Thursday as traders weighed the impact of the US government shutdown, while poor jobs data raised expectations that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates twice more this year. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, fell 0.14% to 97.59. It suffered the sharpest decline against the safe-haven yen, which fell 0.3% to 146.69. After four consecutive days of declines, traders considered how long the US government shutdown would last, its impact on economic data releases, and how it would influence the...
Gold (XAU/USD) trades with a negative bias on Thursday, trimming recent gains after posting a fresh all-time high near $3,895 on Wednesday. At the time of writing, XAU/USD trades around $3,820 during the American session, down over 1.0% after briefly retesting the record peak. The fundamental backdrop still leans supportive. The United States (US) government shutdown is stoking safe-haven interest, while growing conviction that the Federal Reserve (Fed) will cut interest rates later this month is keeping Treasury yields subdued, which bolsters the case for holding the non-yielding...
Oil prices fell about 2% to their lowest in four months on Thursday, extending a run of declines into a fourth day, due to concerns about oversupply in the market ahead of a meeting of the OPEC+ group over the weekend. Brent crude futures fell $1.20, or 1.8%, to $64.15 a barrel by 2:45 p.m. ET (1845 GMT), the lowest since June 2. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude dropped $1.30, or 2.1%, to settle at $60.48 a barrel, the lowest since May 30. OPEC+ could agree to raise oil production by up to 500,000 barrels per day in November, triple the increase for October, as Saudi Arabia seeks to...