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Oil prices continue to fall due to oversupply and US demand concerns
The oil prices dropped on Friday. This was in addition to the big drops in the previous session. Concerns about a possible softening in U.S. Demand and a general oversupply were offset by concerns about disruptions of supply due to conflict in the Middle East or war in Ukraine. Brent crude futures dropped 49 cents or 0.74% to $65.88 per barrel at 0419 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude fell 51 cents or 0.82% to $61.86. The (U.S. inflation) battle is not yet won. This dampens demand for oil in the world's biggest economy. Even geopolitical turmoil is not enough to sustain oil prices. Fundamentals indicate an oversupply of crude and a lacklustre level of demand, said Priyanka Sackdeva, senior analyst at brokerage Phillip Nova. The government reported on Thursday that U.S. consumer price indexes in August rose by the highest in seven months, and a large number of first-time unemployment aid applications were filed last week. This has raised expectations that the Federal Reserve may cut interest rates to boost economic growth next week. This would then increase demand for oil. The oil price rose by up to 2% on Monday, due to the possibility of disruptions in trade or production from war and conflict. However, the benchmarks began falling on Thursday. They have now erased the gains made earlier this week. Losses began when the International Energy Agency, in its monthly report, said that world oil supplies would increase more quickly than expected due to planned production increases by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) and its allies such as Russia. OPEC's own report did not change its high growth predictions for global oil demand in 2025 and 2026. It said the world economy maintained a strong growth trend. SDIC Futures reported in a daily update that the crude market is constantly bouncing between concerns over short-term disruptions and surplus supply pressures. However, geopolitical fears are reducing support for prices. OPEC+ announced on Sunday that it would increase its oil production quotas starting in October, as Saudi Arabia, the group's leading member, tries to regain market shares. Saudi Arabian crude oil exports are expected to increase, according to several sources on Thursday. The state-controlled Aramco is shipping 1.65 million barrels of crude oil per day to China in October. This is a sharp rise from the 1.43 million barrels per days allocated to China in September. The IEA reported that in Russia, which is expected to be the second largest producer of crude oil behind the U.S. by 2024, revenues from the sale of crude and petroleum products declined in August, reaching one of their lowest levels since the beginning of the conflict in Ukraine. A report released by the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday showed that U.S. crude oil stocks increased last week, rising by 3.9 millions barrels to 424.6million barrels. (Reporting and editing by Tom Hogue, Lewis Jackson and Sam Li in Beijing)
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Indonesia seizes Weda Bay Nickel area 148 hectares
Rilke Jeffreyri Huwae, an official from the mining ministry, said that a task force in Indonesia seized a 148 hectare area (366 acres) of PT Weda Bay Nickel because it did not have the necessary forestry permits. The government is targeting illegal mining operations as part of an overall crackdown. Last month, President Prabowo said that the government had identified more than 1,000 illegal mining operations. Rilke stated that PT Weda Bay Nickel holds a mining permit but does not have the forestry licence required to exploit the region. The nickel-rich Halmahera island is home to the Weda Bay Nickel Mine, which is controlled by China's Tsingshan Group, France Eramet SA, and Indonesia Aneka Tambang. Febrie Adriansyah is a senior prosecutor in the Attorney's General Office. She said that the task force also seized a 172.8 hectare mine area owned by PT Tonia Mitra Sejahtera, located in Southeast Sulawesi. He said that the land was part of a total area of about 4.2 million acres which were identified as having no forestry permits. Reporting by Bernadette Cristina Munthe; Writing by Fransiska Naangoy; Editing David Stanway
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JERA Signs MoU with Montenegro on LNG Terminal, Gas Plant
JERA Co. and the Government of Montenegro have signed of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), to explore the development of a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal and an associated gas-fired plant in the country. Through this strategic partnership, the Government of Montenegro will leverage JERA’s global expertise to enhance its national energy mix, strengthen energy security, support decarbonization goals, and position the country as a major energy hub in the Western Balkans. Under this MoU, JERA and the Montenegro Government will conduct a comprehensive feasibility study covering the technical, commercial, and financial viability of the proposed LNG Terminal and the associated gas-fired power plant development project.The study will also lay the groundwork for potential project implementation agreements.“The planned feasibility study will provide us with concrete data on potential locations and the viability of liquefied natural gas development in Montenegro, thereby creating the basis for making strategic decisions in the interest of our country’s energy security and sustainable development,” said Admir Šahmanović, Minister of Energy and Mining of the Montenegro Government."As a reliable energy partner committed to reliable, sustainable energy development, our extensive experience in LNG infrastructure and proven track record of delivering complex international energy projects, uniquely position us to help Montenegro achieve its strategic energy objectives,” added Steve Winn, Chief Global Strategist, JERA.
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Iron ore to gain for the third week in a row on better China demand and supply problems
Iron ore futures fell on Friday due to higher inventories of ore and metals, but they remained on course for a third weekly gain. This was boosted by improved demand in the top consumer China, and concerns about supply from Guinea-based projects. As of 0320 GMT, the most traded January iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was down 0.56% to 795.5 Yuan ($111.73), per metric tonne. The contract is up 1.1% this week. As of 0310 GMT the benchmark October iron ore price on the Singapore Exchange had fallen 0.17% to $105.3 per ton but has seen a gain of 0.44% this week. Steelmakers resumed production after a military parade ended on September 3. This helped to support prices. The average daily hot metal production, which is a measure of ore consumption, increased by 5% from week to week, reaching a record high of 2,41 million tons on September 11. Prices rose earlier this week as fears about the supply of ore from the Simandou project, in Guinea, grew after local reports that Rio Tinto wanted to build refineries locally. This could limit the amount of ore that is available for export. The sharp decline in shipments by Brazil, a major supplier in the first weeks of September, further increased bullish sentiment. Prices fell on Friday as steel inventories rose during the peak season of September, which is when demand is highest. According to Mysteel, this, along with an increase of 0.2% in iron ore portside inventories from week to week, limited the weekly price increases. Coke and coking coal were the only two ingredients that increased in value. The Shanghai Futures Exchange has seen a stagnation in the steel benchmarks. Rebar fell by 0.48%. Hot-rolled coils lost 0.21%. Wire rod fell by 0.4%. Stainless steel increased 0.5%.
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Malaysia restricts data center growth to China, blocking AI chips
M alaysia is a hotspot of data centres. It has slowed down its expansion, which industry analysts and insiders believe will hamper China's attempts to access powerful chips, crucial for improving artificial intelligence capabilities. In recent years, the Southeast Asian nation has attracted data center investments from U.S. tech giants such as Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet’s Google, and their Chinese counterparts Tencent Huawei and Alibaba, due to cheap land and electric costs, and robust local AI market prospects. According to DC Byte, more than two thirds of the data center capacity currently under construction in Southeast Asia’s five major growth markets have been committed to Malaysia. Companies have committed to building more data centres in Johor, Malaysia's neighbouring state. This is due to spillover from Singapore which is more expensive. The data centre boom is slowing down as Malaysia struggles with its power grid and water resources. Washington has also put pressure on Malaysia to stop Chinese firms from using the region as an export control backdoor for U.S. AI chips. Malaysia, China's biggest trading partner in Southeast Asia announced in July that it would require permits for all exports and transshipments of high-performance U.S. chips such as those manufactured by Nvidia. Chinese replacements for U.S.-made chips are still inferior alternatives to the development and maintenance of cutting-edge Chinese AI applications and models that can compete with U.S. competitors. The new restrictions allow Chinese data centres to import U.S. chip for use in the country. Experts say that as Malaysia attempts to finalise its trade agreement with the United States, they will be scrutinised more closely. The U.S. Commerce Department is concerned that data centres located outside of China may purchase AI chips in order to train AI models, and even to support military purposes, in China. Collmann Griffin, a former U.S. Government sanctions policy advisor, said this. The U.S. Commerce Department has not responded to a comment request. 'AI BELTS AND ROAD' China's overseas push began shortly after the release of a three-year plan in 2021 for Chinese data centres operators, which called on these firms to expand overseas, particularly in countries that have signed up to Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative (Xi Jinping’s flagship initiative for overseas development), Malaysia being a signatory. The countries issued a joint declaration at the end of Xi’s visit to Malaysia, in April. They pledged to increase their cooperation in "data links", 5G infrastructure, and AI. This statement referred to the increasing political momentum behind China's expansion of data centres in Malaysia. GDS Holdings is one of China’s largest data centres operators. Two years ago, they began operating an hyperscale campus data centre in Johor. This massive project, which continues to be expanded, was launched. But as the U.S. continues to target China's AI capabilities, GDS has gradually reduced its stake in the Singapore-headquartered subsidiary that managed its overseas data centres and spun it off into an independent entity called DayOne in January. Lee Ting Han said that the "rebranding", by Chinese companies, is likely to diversify their clientele "because they are very aware of what is happening, trade tensions are moving". Jamie Khoo, DayOne's CEO, said at the opening of DayOne Singapore's first data center in July that the company has always planned to separate its business from the Chinese parent because both companies operate under different regulations. Singapore announced last year it would release only 300 megawatts of data center capacity "in a short time" due to its power and water shortages. Knight Frank reported that by December 2024 Johor would have 12 data centres in operation with an estimated combined capacity of 369.9MW. An additional 28 data centers were planned to be developed, which represents an estimated capacity 898.7MW. The state's chief Minister said that Johor is Malaysia's largest data centre investment hub, with 42 projects totaling 164.45 billion Ringgit ($39.08billion) being approved by the second quarter 2025. These projects will contribute 78.6% to the country's operational information technology capacity. Johor's proximity to Singapore allows it to benefit from a lower latency connection to other data centres in the city-state. Lee explained that Johor had begun to slow down. Last year, the state introduced a committee to review data center projects. The committee rejected 30 percent of applications by 2024 because they did not demonstrate sustainable practices in terms of water and energy use. He added that the approval rate is higher as more applicants are familiarized with the process. Vivian Wong is a senior analyst with DC Byte. She said that Southeast Asian countries such as Malaysia are attractive markets for Chinese expansions of data centres due to their geographic proximity, relative lower political friction, and the growing demand for digital infrastructure. She said that, "However as Southeast Asia faces increased tariffs and scrutiny, this could potentially reap less success than in previous years, particularly in markets known to be home to Chinese-backed operations, which are also being targeted by the Trump Administration." $ 1 = 4.2080 ringgit (Reporting from Eduardo Baptista, in Beijing; Ashley Tang, Danial Azhar, and Jun Yuan Yong, in Singapore; Editing done by Miyoung and Jamie Freed).
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Oil prices continue to fall due to oversupply and US demand concerns
After a big drop in the previous session, oil prices dipped on Friday due to concerns over a possible softening in U.S. consumer demand. This was offset by worries about disruptions in supply from the conflict in the Middle East. Brent crude futures dropped 30 cents or 0.45% to $66.07 per barrel at 0114 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude fell 31 cents or 0.5% to $62.06. In the last trading day, benchmarks fell by 1,7% and 2% respectively. The International Energy Agency, in its latest monthly report, said that the world's oil supply will rise faster than expected due to the planned production increases by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+), a grouping of countries including Russia. OPEC's own report did not change its high growth predictions for global oil demand in 2025 and 2026. It said that the world economy is still on a steady growth path. OPEC+ announced on Sunday that it would increase its oil production quotas starting in October, as Saudi Arabia, the group's leading member, tries to regain market shares. Saudi Arabian crude oil exports are expected to increase, according to several sources on Thursday. The state-owned energy company Aramco shipped about 1.65 millions barrels of crude oil per day to China in October. This is a sharp rise from the 1.43 million barrels of crude oil per day allocated to China in September. Analyst Giovanni Staunovo at UBS said that the market was questioning for how long China could continue to absorb barrels and maintain low Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development inventories (OECD). Investors were also keeping an eye on any further sanctions affecting Russian crude oil. The IEA reported that in Russia, which is expected to be the second largest producer of crude oil behind the U.S. by 2024, revenues from the sale of crude and petroleum products declined in August, reaching one of their lowest levels since the beginning of the conflict in Ukraine. Two sources familiar with the plans said that Russia intends to reduce ESPO Blend oil loads from its Far East Kozmino Port in September from 4.2 millions tons to 4 million metric tonnes (about one-million barrels per day), from 4.2million tons in August. The U.S. consumer price index in August rose by the highest rate in seven months. A surge in the number of first-time unemployment aid applications last week raised expectations that the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates in the coming week. This could increase economic growth and the demand for oil. A report released by the Energy Information Administration on Wednesday showed that U.S. crude oil stocks increased last week, rising by 3.9 millions barrels to 424.6million barrels. Reporting by Sam Li in Beijing and Lewis Jackson in New York, with editing by Tom Hogue.
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Sources say Valero is overhauling the FCCU at Tennessee refinery.
Valero Energy Corporation is overhauling its gasoline-producing Fluidic Catalytic Cracking Unit (FCCU) in Memphis, Tennessee, according to people familiar with the plant's operations. Valero's spokesperson was unavailable to comment on the refinery operation Thursday. Sources said that the 65,000 bpd FCCU and the 12,000 bpd unit of alkylation were shut down over the weekend for an overhaul. Sources said that the overhaul should be completed by November 1. Sources claim that the refinery's flaring gas recovery unit and hydrotreater were also taken off production to change a catalyst. The FCCU converts gas oil to unfinished gasoline using a fine powder silica catalyst. Alkylation units are used to convert refinery byproducts into liquids that boost the octane of unfinished gasoline. The flare gas collection unit collects the gases that would have been burned in the refinery’s safety flare system and uses them as fuel for boilers. In order to comply with U.S. Environmental Rules, hydrotreaters remove sulfur from motor gasoline using catalysts and hydrogen. (Reporting and editing by Himani Sarkar, Chris Reese, and Erwin Seba)
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Embraer CEO: 100 commercial aircraft deliveries expected per year by 2028
Embraer's CEO said that the Brazilian planemaker expects to achieve 100 commercial aircraft deliveries annually in 2028. He added that supply chain problems will likely prevent Embraer from reaching that milestone sooner. As part of its recovery after the industry crisis caused by the pandemic, the world's third largest planemaker increased annual deliveries. It expects between 77-85 commercial jet deliveries in 2019, up from 73 last year. Embraer's CEO Francisco Gomes Neto warned that supply-chain snags could limit Embraer's production plans. The company last delivered 100 commercial jets annually in 2017. In an interview with a newspaper on Wednesday, he stated that "2026 is still going to be a challenging year in terms of commercial jet production." "In 2027 we will resume our strong growth plans, and in 2028 I expect we will be hitting 100 commercial planes per year." Embraer faced delays in the supply of engines for its E2 jets last year. Gomes Neto stated that while the situation has improved since then, Embraer is still facing problems with GE Aerospace engines and fuselage parts for its E1 jets. He said that the "delivery" outlook range we have provided the market with has allowed us, despite the challenges of the supply chain, to deliver on what we promised. "Embraer's growth will continue. Our production slots for 2026, 2027 and partially 2028 are almost completely filled. We have orders that need to be delivered, a backlog and we are nearly out of production slots for 2026, 2027 and 2028. "The challenge is now delivering the aircraft." He made his remarks after Embraer announced on Wednesday a firm order of 50 E195E2 aircraft for low-cost airline Avelo Airlines. This was the first U.S. contract for E2 jets. The deal increased Embraer's backlog, and highlighted a solid demand. The company had already received orders from customers such as Japan's ANA, Scandinavian Airlines SAS and U.S. airline SkyWest for E1 jets. Gomes Neto stated that more E2 orders could be placed this year as a number of sales campaigns are currently underway. Gomes Neto said that E1 jets which are almost exclusively used in the U.S. marketplace will not be expected to generate new sales by 2025. Gomes Neto, Embraer's CEO, said that despite the Avelo contract and the 10% U.S. tax on Brazilian-built aircraft Embraer does not plan to establish a U.S. assembly line for the E2 commercial jet. He said that any possible plant would depend on a rush of new orders. The firm had preferred to focus on its campaign to remove the tariff by focusing on the benefits it provides to U.S. customers and suppliers. Gomes Neto stated, "We prefer to present Embraer’s overall business case. Over the next five-year period, our plan is for us to import $21 billion dollars from the U.S. while exporting $13 billion." Embraer produces both generations of commercial aircraft at its Sao Jose dos Campos factory in Brazil on a hybrid production line. Gomes Neto stated that "creating a new product line would require an enormous investment which would result in a significant depreciation, making the product less competive." "If we sold thousands of aircraft and received orders for hundreds, yes, it would not be possible to do all of it (in Brazil). A second line could then be located nearer to the major customers. "But that's just not the case at this time," he said. The company has assembly lines in Florida for executive jets and pitched a $500-million line for the C-390, if the U.S. decides to buy the military cargo plane. Reporting by Gabriel Araujo, Mexico City Editing Brad Haynes and Rod Nickel
Gold prices rise as investors look for safe havens amid US tariff fears

Gold prices rose on Monday due to a safe-haven trend, fueled by fears about the impending reciprocal tariffs of U.S. president Trump.
At 09:50 am (1350 GMT), spot gold was unchanged at $3,022.21. U.S. Gold Futures rose 0.2% to $3,026.40.
The little pullback that we saw last week was quickly bought up. Bob Haberkorn is a senior market strategist with RJO Futures.
Gold, which is traditionally seen as an investment that can protect against geopolitical or economic uncertainty and thrives in low-interest rate environments, has risen 15% this year. Bullion hit a record high of $3057.21 in the last week before falling for two sessions.
Trump hinted Friday at some flexibility in the reciprocal tariffs, which are due to go into effect on April 2, and are expected drive inflation and slow economic growth.
Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee, and New York Fed president John Williams both said that it was premature to assess the economic impact of Trump's trade actions.
Last week, the Fed held its benchmark interest rate steady and indicated two quarter-percentage-point cuts this year.
Investors now await U.S. The Fed's preferred inflation indicator is the Personal Consumption Spending data, due Friday.
In Saudi Arabia, U.S. officials and Russian officials met to discuss progress toward a wider ceasefire in Ukraine. Washington is aiming for a separate maritime ceasefire agreement in the Black Sea before reaching a larger agreement.
Haberkorn stated that if the Saudi Arabian talks materialize over the next week and gold prices drop, it is likely to be snapped up quickly.
Silver spot rose 0.2%, to $33.11, platinum dropped 0.6%, to $968.85 and palladium fell 1.1%, to $947.75. Anmol Choubey reported from Bengaluru. Mark Potter (Editing)
(source: Reuters)