Houston Chronicle

Plunge erases market’s ’18 gains

Worried investors dump oil; prices hit low for year

- By Alex Nussbaum

Investors fled oil in droves Tuesday, repelled by a toxic mix that included a global sell-off in stocks, rising doubts about OPEC’s commitment to production cuts and escalating trade tensions.

Since hitting a four-year high in early October, crude prices have now crashed almost 30 percent. They set a new low for the year Tuesday, falling more than 6 percent in New York and London. It was the second huge loss for the barrel in just over a week.

Crude joined a rout in equities that saw U.S. stocks plunge on heavy trading, as investors fretted about an American confrontat­ion with China over trade, signs of a retail slowdown and cracks in the credit market. U.S. President Donald Trump added pressure on oil when he said that Saudi Arabia has been “responsive” to requests to keep prices low, calling

into question OPEC’s resolve to trim output.

“This had the smell and feel of a liquidatio­n trade,” said Michael Hiley, head of OTC energy trading at LPS Futures in New York. “The Saudis have sent messages that they are going to discuss production cuts, but in the meantime we’ve moved down so much that guys are just getting out.”

West Texas Intermedia­te for January delivery sank $3.77 to settle at $53.43 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 6.6 percent. Total volume traded was 51 percent above the 100-day average, while a measure of market volatility jumped to the highest since February 2016.

Brent for January settlement dropped $4.26 to $62.53 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange, the lowest since December. The global benchmark crude traded at a $9.10 premium to WTI.

Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said Monday that the country and its OPEC allies need to watch the oil market in the coming weeks before making any decisions to reduce output. That wait-and-see approach appears to contrast with Saudi Arabia’s call for cuts, just weeks before a key summit in Vienna.

“The recent slide in oil prices reflects the worsening outlook for oil demand,” said Cailin Birch, a global economist at The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit in London. “We expect the pace of growth in both the U.S. and China to slow heading into 2019, which will maintain downward pressure.”

A report from the industry-funded American Petroleum Institute offered a bullish note for oil investors, finding that U.S. crude stockpiles fell 1.55 million barrels last week, according to people familiar with the data. That runs counter to a Bloomberg survey of analysts that predicted inventorie­s rose for a ninth straight week. The U.S. Energy Department will release official supply numbers today.

 ?? Drew Angerer / Getty Images ?? A trader works during the closing bell Tuesday at the New York Stock Exchange. Markets dipped sharply again, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down more than 500 points.
Drew Angerer / Getty Images A trader works during the closing bell Tuesday at the New York Stock Exchange. Markets dipped sharply again, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down more than 500 points.

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