Oil Updates — prices nudge down on demand concerns, focus on Fed meeting 

US West Texas Intermediate crude was down 11 cents at $70.60 a barrel at 07:09 a.m. Saudi time, while Brent crude futures fell 6 cents to $73.85 a barrel. Shutterstock
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Updated 17 December 2024
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Oil Updates — prices nudge down on demand concerns, focus on Fed meeting 

BEIJING/SINGAPORE: Oil prices eased further on Tuesday as China’s economic data renewed demand concerns, while investors remained cautious ahead of the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision, according to Reuters. 

US West Texas Intermediate crude was down 11 cents at $70.60 a barrel at 07:09 a.m. Saudi time, while Brent crude futures fell 6 cents to $73.85 a barrel. 

Prices were “weighed on by profit-taking after last week’s 6 percent rally and a batch of disappointing Chinese economic data yesterday,” IG market analyst Tony Sycamore said. 

On Monday, prices fell from multi-week highs on unexpected weakness in consumer spending data from China, despite strength in industrial output, and as investors moved into a holding pattern ahead of the Fed's meeting. 

The Fed will hold its last policy meeting of the year on Tuesday and Wednesday, where it is widely expected to cut interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point. 

The meeting will also shed light on how much further officials think they will cut interest rates in 2025 and 2026, and whether the central bank will scale back easing in anticipation of higher inflation under the incoming Trump administration. 

“A 25 basis point cut has already been priced in by the market, so any surprises (from the Fed meeting) may move the market,” said Anh Pham, a LSEG analyst. 

Lower interest rates can boost economic growth and demand for oil. 

The oil outlook for next year is clouded by growing supplies from non-OPEC+ countries such as the US and Brazil and slowing demand, chiefly in China. 

The International Energy Agency said in its monthly report last week that even as producer group OPEC+ kept its output cuts in place, there will be a supply overhang of 950,000 barrels per day next year — almost 1 percent of world supply. 

On Monday, the European Commission announced a 15th package of EU sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, including tougher measures against Chinese entities and more vessels from Moscow’s so-called “shadow fleet” that are not regulated or insured by conventional Western providers. 

A group of Western countries will begin to check insurance documents of Russia’s shadow fleet of vessels in the English Channel, Danish straits, Gulf of Finland and the sound between Sweden and Denmark. 

The new EU sanctions are unlikely to translate to “real” disruption as most flows now do not use Western services, so they will not be disrupted, said LSEG’s Pham. 


Global sukuk market enters 2026 on solid footing after $300bn issuance: Fitch 

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Global sukuk market enters 2026 on solid footing after $300bn issuance: Fitch 

RIYADH: Global sukuk markets entered the new year with solid fundamentals, as the instrument is poised to remain a key funding tool in emerging markets after record issuance of about $300 billion in 2025, according to Fitch Ratings. 

Global sukuk issuance rose 25 percent last year, supported by steady activity across Gulf Cooperation Council countries, as well as increased participation from banks, corporates, infrastructure and project finance issuers.

The ratings agency said issuance momentum is expected to continue this year, supported by funding diversification strategies, upcoming maturities and refinancing needs across sovereigns, financial institutions and corporates. 

Sukuk are Shariah-compliant financial instruments that grant investors partial ownership in an issuer’s underlying assets and serve as an alternative to conventional bonds. 

The report said sukuk issuance in 2025 was dominated by sovereign issuers, alongside rising activity from banks, corporates, infrastructure and project finance. 

Bashar Al-Natoor, Fitch’s global head of Islamic Finance, said: “We expect global sukuk issuance to sustain momentum in 2026, with continued growth in the core markets and a rising share in EMs (emerging markets) — at about 16 percent of all US dollar debt capital market issuance in 2025 excluding China.”  

He added: “Geopolitical tensions and shifting sharia standards may pose risks, but fundamentals remain sound, supported by the market’s broadly solid credit profile.” 

According to the report, global outstanding sukuk surpassed $1 trillion by the end of 2025. 

Sukuk’s share of debt capital markets outstanding was highest in the GCC at 41 percent, followed by ASEAN at 16 percent and Turkiye at 8 percent.  

About 82.5 percent of rated sukuk are investment grade, while 90.5 percent of issuers carry Stable Outlooks, with no sukuk defaults recorded over the past four years. 

Highlighting global expansion, Fitch said frontier markets such as Egypt, Jordan and Sri Lanka tapped the sukuk market in 2025. 

“Egypt is emerging as a regular issuer, with most 2025 dollar issuance in sukuk format. Algeria, Tunisia, Malta and the Philippines issued sukuk rules in 2025, paving the way for new market entrants,” added Fitch Ratings. 

The report noted that implementation of the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions’ Shariah Standard 62 remains unfinished, while new terms in some GCC sukuk documents allow trustees to register asset titles in their name following a default. 

In April 2025, AAOIFI said its Shariah board was in the process of amending the proposed Standard 62 after receiving industry feedback, without specifying a timeline for completion. 

The guideline aims to standardize various aspects of the sukuk market, including asset backing, ownership transfer and trading procedures.