U.S. EIA crude oil inventories for the week to January 17 - 1.017 million barrels, expectations - 1.645 million barrels, previous values - 1.962 million barrels.
EIA report: Commercial crude oil inventories excluding strategic reserves fell 1.017 million barrels to 412 million barrels, a decrease of 0.25%.
EIA report: the four-week average supply of U.S. crude oil products was 19.652 million barrels per day, an increase of 0.67% over the same period last year.
EIA report: January 17 week U.S. domestic crude oil production decreased by 4,000 barrels to 13.477 million barrels per day.
Africa's largest crude oil producer is recovering, facing the temptation of economic interests, it may face a showdown with OPEC + over quotas. Click to view...
NYMEX most active crude oil futures contract Beijing time on January 22 23:46--23:47 within one minute trading disk instantly traded 9943 lots, the total value of the transaction contract 753 million US dollars (including long funds *** billion US dollars, short funds *** billion US dollars), the specific reference "database - NYMEX crude oil futures real trading volume".
The technical aspects of the daily external futures varieties are summarized, among which three varieties, including Brent crude oil, have short opportunities.
On January 22nd, due to the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday in the United States, the US API and EIA crude oil inventory data originally scheduled to be released on Wednesday were postponed to Thursday (January 23rd) at 05:30 and Friday (January 24th) at 01:00. Investors are invited to pay attention.
WTI crude oil fell for four consecutive days like a market "outcast", but there still seems to be a lot of support on the fundamentals, and there are upside risks in the short term.
Investment banks believe that the increase in U.S. crude oil production will be a sustainable demand, but Trump's executive order is actually following the trend.
Daily external futures technical summary, including Brent crude oil and other six varieties have short opportunities.
WTI crude oil fell 2% in the day to $77.48/barrel. Brent crude oil fell back below $80/barrel, down 1.92% in the day.
International oil prices continued to rise, with WTI crude oil rising more than 3% and Brent crude oil rising 2.4% to $79.25/barrel and $81.65/barrel, respectively.
On January 16th, as of the close of the day on the 15th, the light crude oil futures price for February delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange rose by $2.54 to close at $80.04 per barrel, an increase of 3.28%; the London Brent crude oil futures price for March delivery rose by $2.11 to close at $82.03 per barrel, an increase of 2.64%.