
After all, why does oil react so much to what Donald Trump says?
Lusa Read Also: Government concerned with the impact of fuel price tensions
- Center7
6 agency rewrites / co-publications detected
Summary
Lusa Read Also: Government concerned with the impact of fuel price tensions. After all, why does oil react so much to what Donald Trump says?. In fact, given what happened this week with Brent's barrel, it is certain that fuel prices will be more expensive at the beginning of next week, which has even caused the government to express concerns about this impact on the Portuguese portfolio.
Furthermore, Currently, most of the oil negotiations are done by computers programmed to react to the millisecond. If the American President changes his mind the next day, the price will adjust again, but no one wants to risk paying more for waiting," the analyst explained. With regard to oil, which fired this week following Trump's statements, João Cruz recalled that the "US is the world's largest oil producer and has enormous power in global politics", so, "when a leader with this weight makes a statement, even if it is just a threat or a passing opinion, investors cannot afford to wait to verify its veracity ".
In addition, If Donald Trump suggests that he will impose sanctions on a producer country, the market assumes as soon as there may be less oil in the world in a few months' time. Most analyzes are selective the two sides can craft a comprehensive settlement within the 60-day trading window lay out in the document. Any heavy climbing beyond tit-for-tat strikes could risk a return to full-fledged war, even though Trump insisted on Wednesday the latest events would end “very quickly” as global oil prices spiked about 7%.
Cross-referenced from 7 sources across 3 countries and 3 languages.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
Lusa Read Also: Government concerned with the impact of fuel price tensions
reliability low1/2 sourcesAfter all, why does oil react so much to what Donald Trump says?.
reliability low1/2 sourcesIn fact, given what happened this week with Brent's barrel, it is certain that fuel prices will be more expensive at the beginning of next week, which has even caused the government to express concerns about this impact on the Portuguese portfolio.
reliability low1/2 sourcesCurrently, most of the oil negotiations are done by computers programmed to react to the millisecond.
reliability low1/2 sourcesIf the American President changes his mind the next day, the price will adjust again, but no one wants to risk paying more for waiting," the analyst explained.
reliability low1/2 sourcesWith regard to oil, which fired this week following Trump's statements, João Cruz recalled that the "US is the world's largest oil producer and has enormous power in global politics", so, "when a leader with this weight makes a statement, even if it is just a threat or a passing opinion, investors cannot afford to wait to verify its veracity ".
reliability low1/2 sourcesIf Donald Trump suggests that he will impose sanctions on a producer country, the market assumes as soon as there may be less oil in the world in a few months' time.
reliability low1/2 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
Most analyzes are selective the two sides can craft a comprehensive settlement within the 60-day trading window lay out in the document.
according to Daily Dispatch +1Any heavy climbing beyond tit-for-tat strikes could risk a return to full-fledged war, even though Trump insisted on Wednesday the latest events would end “very quickly” as global oil prices spiked about 7%.
according to Daily Dispatch +1
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
No notable framing divergence.
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.