Oil Updates – crude set for best week in over 2 months on solid demand outlook

Brent crude futures were up 38 cents, or 0.46 percent, at $83.13 a barrel by 2:10 p.m. Saudi time. Shutterstock
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Updated 14 June 2024
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Oil Updates – crude set for best week in over 2 months on solid demand outlook

LONDON: Brent oil futures prices were steady on Friday and on course for their best week in more than four months after solid projections for crude oil and fuel demand.

Brent crude futures were up 38 cents, or 0.46 percent, at $83.13 a barrel by 2:10 p.m. Saudi time. West Texas Intermediate US crude futures gained 27 cents, or 0.34 percent, to $78.89.

Brent and the US benchmark had gained almost 4.5 percent over the week. That would mark Brent’s highest weekly rise in percentage terms since the week to Feb. 9. For WTI, it was the biggest since the week to April 5.

Price support came from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries this week after it stuck to a forecast for relatively strong growth in global oil demand for 2024 while Goldman Sachs projected solid US fuel demand this summer.

The International Energy Agency, meanwhile, expects oil demand to peak by 2029, levelling off around 106 million barrels per day toward the end of the decade, it said in a report on Wednesday.

However, this week’s price rally cooled somewhat after the US Federal Reserve kept interest rates on hold, with the start of rate cuts unlikely before December.

“In view of the still uncertain economic outlook for the major economic regions, a further price increase is not to be expected for the time being,” said Commerzbank analyst Barbara Lambrecht.

Elsewhere, Russia pledged to meet its output obligations under the pact among the OPEC+ group of producers after saying it exceeded its quota in May.

“No matter how many times it promises to make up for poor compliance at a future date, the market just sees more oil and an agreement that might just possibly unravel,” said PVM analyst John Evans.

Market focus is also on Gaza ceasefire talks, which could alleviate concerns about potential disruption to oil supply from the region.

The US is very concerned that hostilities on the Israel-Lebanon border could escalate, a senior US official said, adding that specific security arrangements are needed for the area and a ceasefire in Gaza is not enough. 


Saudi Arabia’s NDMC raises $13bn for infrastructure projects 

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Saudi Arabia’s NDMC raises $13bn for infrastructure projects 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia raised $13 billion through a seven-year syndicated loan as the Kingdom steps up funding for infrastructure projects spanning power, water and public utilities.  

The financing was arranged by the National Debt Management Center as part of the government’s medium-term borrowing strategy, which aims to diversify funding sources and secure financing at competitive costs, the agency said in a statement. 

The transaction supports Saudi Arabia’s broader push to upgrade infrastructure under its Vision 2030 economic transformation program, as the government accelerates investment in utilities and development projects alongside private-sector participation. 

“This transaction aims to leverage market opportunities to execute alternative government financing activities that contribute to economic growth, including the financing of development and infrastructure projects aligned with Saudi Vision 2030,” said NDMC.  

NDMC was established in 2015 within the Ministry of Finance as the Debt Management Office before being restructured into its current form, with a mandate to manage public debt and meet the government’s financing needs across short-, medium- and long-term horizons. 

The syndicated loan follows a series of recent debt market transactions. In December, the center raised SR7.01 billion ($1.87 billion) through a domestic sukuk issuance split across five tranches, with the first one valued at SR1.23 billion set to mature in 2027.  
The second tranche amounted to SR335 million, maturing in 2029. 

The third tranche was valued at SR1.180 billion maturing in 2032, and the fourth tranche was SR1.692 billion set to expire in 2036.  

The fifth tranche was worth SR2.573 billion, maturing in 2039. 

In September, NDMC completed the issuance of a $5.5 billion (SR20.63 billion) international sukuk under the Kingdom’s Global Trust Certificate Issuance Program. 

The offering — the country’s first international sukuk based on an Ijarah structure — was issued in two tranches. A five-year sukuk maturing in 2030 raised $2.25 billion (SR8.44 billion), while a 10-year tranche maturing in 2035 secured $3.25 billion (SR12.19 billion, NDMC said at the time. 

The center added that the issuance aligns with its strategy to diversify the investor base and meet Saudi Arabia’s financing requirements through international debt capital markets in an efficient and effective manner.