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March 27th - According to Tianjin Customs, the Tianjin Lingang Comprehensive Bonded Zone officially commenced operations at 11:00 AM today (March 27th). Following this commencement, enterprises within the zone can legally enjoy preferential tax policies, including tax exemption on imported machinery and equipment and infrastructure materials, bonded entry at the first line, tax refunds at the second line, and selective taxation on domestic sales. As an important open platform serving the coordinated development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, the commencement of operations in the Lingang Comprehensive Bonded Zone will further contribute to Tianjins construction of a new high ground for higher-level opening-up.March 27 - The Israel Defense Forces claimed responsibility for a large-scale attack on Iranian regime facilities in Tehran early on March 27 local time. Iran has not yet responded.The Peoples Bank of China (PBOC) announced today that it conducted 146.2 billion yuan of 7-day reverse repurchase operations, with both the bid and winning bids amounting to 146.2 billion yuan. The operating rate was 1.40%, unchanged from the previous rate.On March 27, the Japanese government held a cabinet meeting and formally approved the provisional budget for fiscal year 2026, submitting it to the Diet shortly thereafter. The budget applies to the 11-day period from April 1 to 11, with total general accounting expenditures of 8.5641 trillion yen. The government plans to push for its passage in the Diet on March 30 to avoid a budget vacuum. This provisional budget is reportedly the first such measure in 11 years since Shinzo Abes second term began in 2015. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi had been striving to pass the formal budget for fiscal year 2026 within this fiscal year (April 2025 to March 2026), but opposition parties demanded sufficient time for deliberation and opposed a hasty vote within the year, leading to disagreements in the budget deliberations. The provisional budget mainly includes social security expenditures and local government tax revenue allocations. As a transitional arrangement, the provisional budget will automatically expire after the formal budget is passed.U.S. House Speaker Boris Johnson: House Democrats voted again this week against funding for the Department of Homeland Security. This is the third time they have opposed funding for law enforcement agencies responsible for protecting Americans. The Democrats have endangered American lives, seemingly unconcerned about injuries and deaths resulting from ignoring the Department of Homeland Securitys shutdown.

Oil costs increase as supply restrictions trump economic worries

Charlie Brooks

Jul 05, 2022 11:12


Oil prices climbed on Monday as supply worries spurred by a decrease in OPEC production, unrest in Libya, and sanctions against Russia trumped fears of a worldwide recession that would diminish demand.


In June, Euro zone inflation hit an all-time high, boosting the case for rapid rate rises by the European Central Bank, while consumer sentiment in the United States reached an all-time low.


Brent oil rose $2.26, or 2%, to $113.89 a barrel as of 12:47 p.m. ET (1648 GMT), after shedding more than $1 in early trading. The price of U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $2.20, or 2%, to $110.63 despite the lack of trading activity over the Fourth of July holiday.


According to a Reuters survey, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) failed to meet its June goal of increasing production.


Thursday, authorities in OPEC member Libya declared force majeure at the Es Sidr and Ras Lanuf ports and the El Feel oilfield, claiming a reduction of 865,000 barrels per day in oil output (bpd).


Meanwhile, more than two weeks of unrest have caused Ecuador to lose almost 2 million barrels of production, according to Petroecuador, the country's state-owned oil company.


This week, a strike in Norway may restrict supply from the biggest oil producer in Western Europe and reduce overall petroleum production by 8 percent.


"This background of rising supply interruptions clashes with a probable shortage of spare production capacity among Middle Eastern oil producers," said Stephen Brennock of oil trader PVM, referring to the producers' limited ability to pump more oil.


And prices will climb if new oil production does not reach the market shortly.


On Monday, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson asked OPEC+ to raise oil output to tackle the growing cost of living.


As a consequence of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, supply concerns have sent Brent oil prices close to 2008's record high of $147 a barrel.


As a consequence of restrictions on Russian oil and limited gas supplies, surging energy prices have driven inflation in certain countries to multi-decade highs and stoked fears of a recession.