Business World

Oil prices drop slightly on China demand fears

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NEW YORK — Oil prices settled slightly lower on Friday but recorded a weekly gain as Middle East tensions and disruption­s to oil output offset concerns about the Chinese and global economies.

Brent futures settled 54 cents lower at $78.56 a barrel. US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude fell 67 cents to settle at $73.41.

For the week, Brent gained about 0.5% while the US benchmark rose over 1%.

In China, slower-than-expected economic growth in the fourth quarter raised doubts about forecasts that demand there will drive global oil growth in 2024.

“The Chinese equity market this week dropped to near a fiveyear low,” said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho Bank. The indication for weaker demand drove crude prices down on Friday.

In the Middle East, geopolitic­al risks supported prices for the week.

On Friday, tensions escalated in Gaza as Israeli forces pushed south against Hamas militants, while earlier in the week, the US launched new strikes against Houthi anti-ship missiles aimed at the Red Sea.

Although conflict in the Middle East has not shut any oil production, supply outages continued in Libya.

In the US, about 30% of oil output in North Dakota, the country’s third largest producing state, remained shut due to extreme cold, the state’s pipeline authority said on Friday.

Output had been cut by some 700,000 barrels per day, or more than half, midweek. It could take a month for production to return to normal levels, the state regulator said on Friday.

“Supply disruption­s remain an upside risk but there are downside risks too, including the global economy,” Craig Erlam, analyst at brokerage OANDA, said.

Meanwhile, the number of oil rigs operating in the US, an early indictor of production, fell by two to 497 this week, Baker Hughes said on Friday.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency this week raised its 2024 global demand forecast, but its projection is half that of producer group OPEC. The Paris-based agency also said that — barring significan­t disruption­s to flows — the market looked reasonably well supplied in 2024.

“The forecast for global oil demand growth remains unclear, with stakeholde­rs and research institutio­ns providing widely differing projection­s,” analyst Bjarne Schieldrop of SEB said. —

 ?? Source: REUTERS ??
Source: REUTERS

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