Home Industry Energy Oil steadies after biggest monthly advance since early 2022 West Texas Intermediate was little changed below $82 a barrel after surging 16 per cent in July by Bloomberg August 1, 2023 Image credit: Getty Images Oil steadied after the biggest monthly advance since early 2022 as signs of a tighter global crude market were countered by indications the rally may be due for a pause after such a rapid run-up. West Texas Intermediate was little changed below $82 a barrel after surging 16 per cent in July. The gains, which lifted prices to a three-month high, have been underpinned by signals demand is running ahead of supply after OPEC+ reduced output. In addition, with US inflation cooling, there’s speculation the world’s biggest economy can avoid recession. Still, crude’s climb means that its 15-day relative-strength index has risen to near 70, a level that suggests the market may be overbought in the near term and could face a downward correction. Oil exchange-traded funds just posted their largest week of outflows for more than a year. Crude’s turnaround has been accompanied by a raft of banks including Goldman Sachs Group suggesting the market now faces a deficit after prices fell in the first half due to a supply glut. The OPEC+ Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee is due to hold an online review of the market on Friday to gauge the impact of the reductions that have been led by Saudi Arabia and Russia. Read: Oil set for best month since early 2022 as market tightens Tags energy oil OPEC 0 Comments You might also like Meet ARIF, ADNOC Distribution’s new investor relations chatbot ADNOC, PETRONAS finalise 15-Year LNG sales deal for Ruwais Project OPEC+ delays oil output hike until April, extends cuts into 2026 Saudi Aramco, Linde and SLB to set up CCS hub in Jubail