Business World

Oil prices fall on faltering China economy, US crude stock build

-

OIL PRICES settled lower on Wednesday, pressured by low economic activity in leading crude importer China and a surprise build in US crude inventorie­s as producers ramped up output following frigid weather this month.

Brent crude futures for March, which expire on Wednesday, settled down $1.16 or about 1.4% to $81.71 a barrel while the more actively traded April contract settled down $1.89 or about 2.3% at $80.55.

US West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude futures settled down $1.97 or roughly 2.5% to $75.85. Both benchmarks fell by more than $2 a barrel earlier in the session.

Manufactur­ing activity in China, the world’s second-largest economy, contracted for a fourth straight month in January, an official factory survey showed on Wednesday.

The latest sign of the broader Chinese economy struggling to regain momentum came days after a court ordered the liquidatio­n of troubled property developer China Evergrande. The real estate sector accounts for a quarter of China’s GDP.

Major forecaster­s, including the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, see oil demand growth in 2024 driven primarily by Chinese consumptio­n.

Prices were pressured after US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA) data showed weekly crude inventorie­s rose by 1.2 million barrels last week, compared with analysts’ expectatio­ns for a 217,000 barrel draw.

US domestic oil production climbed back up to 13 million barrels per day (bpd) last week after nearly one million bpd of capacity was shut in during cold weather earlier this month.

Meanwhile, crude runs in oil refineries fell to their lowest level since January 2023 due to the weather, as refinery utilizatio­n rates to 82.9%, according to the EIA.

“Refiners are going to be in no hurry to rush back to levels above 90%,” said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho.

US policy makers, meanwhile, kept rates unchanged this week. Economist prediction­s suggested that a cut is unlikely before June, given continuing strength in household spending and uncertaint­y over the economic outlook.

The Israel-Hamas war has widened to conflict in the Red Sea between the United States and Iran-aligned Houthi militants.

But while that has disrupted oil and natural gas tanker shipping, which is driving up delivery costs and starting to affect oil supplies, a Reuters poll suggested that record production in the West and slow economic growth will keep a lid on prices and limit any geopolitic­al risk premium. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines