The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Oil anchored near US$33 a barrel on rising Us-china tensions

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NEW YORK: Oil was anchored near US$33 a barrel as an escalating war of words between the US and China added to caution over the prospects for a global recovery in demand.

China warned on Sunday that some in the US were pushing the countries toward a new Cold War, stoking concerns that deteriorat­ing relations between Beijing and Washington could complicate the market’s recovery from a historic demand crash. Futures edged higher in New York after falling earlier, with trading volumes thin due to holidays in the US, UK and Singapore.

However, there are signs the oil market is positionin­g itself for a recovery. US shale drillers have cut the number of active rigs to the lowest since 2009, trimming output further. This comes as Opec+ slashes output by almost 10 million barrels a day in an effort to reduce a glut.

Oil has surged about 75% this month as pockets of demand return in China and India after the easing of lockdown restrictio­ns, and as US crude inventorie­s start to decline. But, the recovery is expected to be long and uncertain, with the risk of a second wave of infections possibly complicati­ng a rebound.

“The heightenin­g of tensions between the US and China will continue to sully the landscape,” said Stephen Innes, chief market strategist at Axicorp Ltd. Still, the overall impact may be limited if there’s no “combative retaliatio­n” from Beijing, he said.

The US should give up its “wishful thinking” of changing China, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said during his annual news briefing on the sidelines of National People’s Congress meetings in Beijing. He also warned America not to cross China’s “red line” on Taiwan.

American drillers cut the number of oil rigs at work by 21 to 237 last week, reducing the count for a 10th week, according to Baker Hughes data last Friday.

While fuel consumptio­n climbs in some nations with the easing of lockdown restrictio­ns, the cheapest US gasoline in nearly two decades won’t be enough to entice nervous Americans to hit the road for Memorial Day weekend. The uncertaint­y around travel is so great due to the virus that American Automobile Associatio­n is not releasing a forecast for the first time in 20 years.

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