The Fiji Times

USdemandli­mitsdrop

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NEW YORK - Oil prices fell for a second straight session on Thursday on an uncertain demand outlook as more countries considered restrictio­ns on Chinese travelers with COVID-19 infections spreading in the top oil-importing nation.

China’s government is dismantlin­g pandemic restrictio­ns, yet a surge in infections there is prompting tougher travel rules on Chinese visitors in some countries.

Brent crude futures for February delivery fell by a dollar to settle at $82.26, down 1.2 per cent.

US West Texas Intermedia­te crude futures settled at $78.40 per barrel, down by 56 cents, or 0.7 per cent.

Britain is reviewing whether to impose restrictio­ns on people arriving from China.

The United States, Japan, India and Taiwan have already imposed testing on arrivals from the country.

“Crude is limping towards the end of the year in thin trading uninspired by the lifting of COVID restrictio­ns in China amid skyrocketi­ng cases, with little to galvanize crude bulls or bears in today’s benign EIA report,” said Matt Smith, lead oil analyst at Kpler.

US crude oil inventorie­s rose unexpected­ly last week as imports climbed and exports fell, the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA) said on Thursday.

Despite the surprise build in crude oil stocks, the report itself was “positive” and showed a “solid rebound” in implied oil demand, resulting in large draws of refined products, said Giovanni Staunovo of Swiss bank UBS.

Both oil contracts dipped more than 2 per cent early in Thursday’s session, but pared losses as the US dollar slipped, with investors on edge about interest rate hikes.

A weaker dollar makes

oil cheaper for holders of other currencies.

“With so many moving parts, I don’t think anyone can say anything with any strong degree of conviction,” Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at OANDA, said.

“OPEC+ could make an announceme­nt at any point and suddenly everything changes. Not to mention Russia’s war in Ukraine and how that develops.”

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