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 EIAโs 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.
Fedโs 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. Powellโs testimony continues later on Thursday, and additional comments could also sway oil, equity, and bond markets.
Commenting on last weekโs decision to hold interest rates unchanged, for now, Powerย said, โWe 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, โis a pretty good guess of what will happen if the economy performs about as expected,โ Powell said.
โPowell has implied that the Fedโs 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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