When Jerome Powell told Congress that more interest rate hikes are likely, the market, including oil futures, sold off. Charles Kennedy of OilPrice.com reports:

Oil prices slumped by 2% early on Thursday after Fed Chair Jerome Powell told Congress that further interest rate hikes are coming in the second half of the year after a pause last week.

As of 8:11 a.m. EDT on Thursday, ahead of EIAโ€™s weekly inventory report, the U.S. benchmark,ย WTI Crude, was trading at $71.12, down by 1.92% on the day. The international benchmark,ย Brent Crude, was falling by 1.84% and traded at $75.67.

On Wednesday, Brent settled at above $77, the highest settlement since May 24, as the U.S. dollar fell. But prices resumed their slide early on Thursday.

Fedโ€™s Powell on Wednesday told Congress in his half-year testimony on the economy to lawmakers that further rate hikes would be necessary to fight inflation. Powellโ€™s testimony continues later on Thursday, and additional comments could also sway oil, equity, and bond markets.

Commenting on last weekโ€™s decision to hold interest rates unchanged, for now, Powerย said, โ€œWe didn’t use the word pause and I wouldn’t use it here today.โ€

The outlook for two more rate hikes by the end of 2023, included in the Summary of Economic Projections released by the Fed last week, โ€œis a pretty good guess of what will happen if the economy performs about as expected,โ€ Powell said.

โ€œPowell has implied that the Fedโ€™s mantra is now curbing inflation over negating the possible adverse after-effects on economic growth from tighter credit conditions,โ€ Kelvin Wong, senior market analyst at OANDA,ย saidย on Thursday.

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