The Welland Tribune

Fears send oil tumbling again

Surge in coronaviru­s cases across U.S. raising concerns about demand

- LOW DE WEI AND ALEX LONGLEY

Oil extended declines after swelling U.S. crude stockpiles and a surge in coronaviru­s cases across the nation raised concerns about demand in the world’s largest economy.

Futures in New York slipped 2.3 per cent toward $37 (U.S.) a barrel, after the biggest fall in almost two weeks in the previous session. New infections reached daily records in Florida, California and Texas, where the governor said a “massive outbreak” is sweeping the state. The fear of new lockdowns sent U.S. gasoline futures tumbling by the most in two months on Wednesday.

A dose of pessimism has returned to the oil market in recent days, after a run of gains that dragged prices higher from the depths of the COVID-19 crisis in April and early May. Activity at Indian refineries hasn’t returned to full capacity as demand in many parts of Asia fails to replicate China’s bounceback. Brent’s prompt timespread has dropped into contango again, a structure that suggests oversupply.

The global economy is struggling to shake off the virus, with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund on Wednesday predicting a significan­tly deeper recession than it anticipate­d two months ago. American crude inventorie­s have also risen for three straight weeks. These are making the job much tougher for OPEC and its partners as they push ahead with their record production cuts in an attempt to repair the market.

“If the economy doesn’t pick up, that will become a drag on crude oil demand just when OPEC+ has to make a decision about what to do next,” said Ole Hansen, head of commoditie­s strategy at Saxo Bank. There’s a risk of oil dropping further “if cracks should appear in the OPEC+ resolve to keep barrels off the market.”

Texas on Wednesday posted its worst day so far for new cases. New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t set quarantine­s for incoming travellers from hot zones in the U.S., while North Carolina froze its reopening for three weeks.

The pandemic is now predicted to kill 180,000 Americans by October.

There will also be added selling pressure on oil from ProShares’s $1.4-billion oil exchange-traded fund, known as UCO. The fund plans to sell out of its September WTI holdings, which account for about 10 per cent of the outstandin­g contracts, between now and July 1.

 ?? PAUL RATJE AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? The fear of new lockdowns sent U.S. gasoline futures tumbling by the most in two months on Wednesday. The global economy is struggling to shake off the virus.
PAUL RATJE AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO The fear of new lockdowns sent U.S. gasoline futures tumbling by the most in two months on Wednesday. The global economy is struggling to shake off the virus.

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