Arab News

Oil slides 5% to lowest level since June on demand fears

Rising coronaviru­s infections worldwide heighten concerns over weakening recovery

- Reuters London

Oil slid 5 percent to below $40 a barrel on Tuesday, its lowest since June, over concerns that a demand recovery could weaken as coronaviru­s infections flare up around the world.

Coronaviru­s cases rose in 22 of the 50 US states, a Reuters analysis showed on the Labor Day holiday weekend. New infections are also increasing in India and Britain.

Brent crude fell $2.18, or 5.2 percent, to $39.83 in early afternoon trade, and earlier slipped to $39.61, the lowest since June 25. US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude dropped $2.99 or 7.5 percent, to $36.78.

On Monday, crude fell after Saudi Arabia’s state oil company Aramco cut the October official selling prices for its Arab light oil, a sign demand may be stuttering.

“The price weakness is continuing today,” said Eugen Weinberg, analyst at Commerzban­k. “We believe this is attributab­le first and foremost to demand concerns.”

Both oil benchmarks have dropped out of the ranges they were trading in throughout August. Brent is falling for a fifth day and has lost more than 10 percent since the end of August. “The streak of losses is driven by a stalling crude demand outlook for the rest of the year,” said Paola Rodriguez-Masiu, of Rystad Energy. Still, oil has recovered from historic lows hit in April, thanks to a record supply cut by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting

Countries and allies, known as OPEC+. The producers are meeting on Sept. 17 to review the market. Crude has also found support from a weaker US dollar, although the US currency was up on Tuesday. The market could rally beyond $45 later this year, said Norbert Ruecker, head of economics at Swiss bank Julius Baer. “Fundamenta­lly, things have not changed,” he said.

“Demand is recovering, supply remains constraine­d, and the storage overhang is slowly disappeari­ng.”

 ?? Shuttersto­ck ?? Crude fell after Saudi Aramco cut the October official selling prices for its Arab light oil, a sign that global demand may be stuttering amid fears of a second pandemic wave.
Shuttersto­ck Crude fell after Saudi Aramco cut the October official selling prices for its Arab light oil, a sign that global demand may be stuttering amid fears of a second pandemic wave.

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