- August 8th, 2023
European Gas Prices Swing as Winter Stockpiles Keep Rising
European natural gas fluctuated early Tuesday, with traders weighing ever-rising fuel stockpiles against the risk of supply constraints. ›
European natural gas fluctuated early Tuesday, with traders weighing ever-rising fuel stockpiles against the risk of supply constraints. ›
Oil prices slipped on Tuesday after data showed China’s imports and exports fell much more than expected in July in a further sign of weak growth in the world’s largest oil importer, although losses were limited by expected supply tightness. ›
Oil prices edged down on Monday, but were still near their highest levels since mid-April after top producers Saudi Arabia and Russia pledged to keep supplies down for another month to tighten global markets further and support prices. ›
British and Dutch gas prices fell on Friday morning as expectations of strong output from wind farms curbed demand for gas from power stations. ›
Oil prices rose for a second day on Friday, set for their sixth week of gains, after Saudi Arabia and Russia, the world’s second and third-largest crude producers, pledged to cut output through next month. ›
British and Dutch wholesale gas prices rose on Thursday morning as demand from power stations ramped up amid weaker wind power output and as an extension at Norwegian gas infrastructure curbed supply. ›
Oil prices were little changed on Thursday after a two-day decline, including a sharp drop on Wednesday, as a U.S. government credit downgrade weighed on sentiment, though concerns around supply tightness provided some support. ›
Oil prices surged by almost 1% on Wednesday, trading near their highest since April, as crude and fuel product inventory data showing robust demand from the world’s biggest fuel consumer, the U.S., offsetting demand concerns elsewhere. ›
European natural gas prices rose for a second session as supply risks and uncertainty about the upcoming winter outweighed rising storage levels. ›
Oil prices slipped on Tuesday but were still near a three-month high reached in the previous session on signs of tightening global supply, as producers implement output cuts, and strong demand in the United States, the world’s biggest fuel consumer. ›