The Sun (Malaysia)

Brent slides 10%, US crude dives below US$30 a barrel

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LONDON: Brent fell by 10% and US crude to below US$30 (RM129) a barrel yesterday, as emergency rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve and its global counterpar­ts failed to tame markets and China’s factory output plunged at the sharpest pace in 30 years amid the spread of coronaviru­s.

Brent crude was down US$3.36, or 9.9%, to US$30.49 a barrel by 1134 GMT. The front-month price had risen $1 earlier in the session.

US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude was at US$29.42, down US$2.31 or 7.2%.

To combat the economic fallout of the pandemic, the Fed on Sunday cut its key rate to near zero, triggering an unschedule­d easing by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to a record low as markets in Asia opened for trading this week.

The Bank of Japan later stepped in by easing monetary policy further in an emergency meeting. However, the measures failed to calm the investors, and stock markets weakened again.

“The price response is understand­able given that lower interest rates and new bond purchasing programmes will do nothing to combat the current weakness of oil demand,” Commerzban­k analyst Carsten Fritsch said.

He added that the more countries freeze public life, close their borders and cancel flights, the greater the impact will be on oil demand, especially as this also involves economic activity being generally scaled down.

Meanwhile, China’s industrial output fell by a much larger than expected 13.5% in JanuaryFeb­ruary from the same period a year earlier, the weakest reading since January 1990 when Reuters records began.

Brent's premium to WTI narrowed to less than US$1, close to its narrowest since 2016, making US crude oil uncompetit­ive in internatio­nal markets.

“The relative weakness in Brent shouldn't come as too much of a surprise, given the severity of the breakout across Europe,” said ING analyst Warren Patterson.

“Another factor offering relatively more support to WTI is news that President Trump has ordered Strategic Petroleum Reserves to be filled up at these lower price levels.”

US President Donald Trump said on Friday that the US would take advantage of low oil prices and fill the nation's emergency crude oil reserve, in a move aimed to help energy producers struggling from the price plunge.

Oil prices have also been under intense pressure on the supply side, as top exporter Saudi Arabia ramped up output and slashed prices to increase sales to Asia and Europe. – Reuters

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