The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Oil extends losses, falls 2%

Global coronaviru­s spike cools demand hopes

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SINGAPORE: Oil prices slid for a second straight session yesterday as coronaviru­s cases rose in the United States and other places, leading some countries to resume partial lockdowns that could hurt fuel demand.

Brent crude dropped 83 cents, or 2%, to US$40.19 a barrel by 0456 GMT, while US crude was at US$37.69, down 80 cents, or 2.1%.

Brent crude is set to end June with a third consecutiv­e monthly gain after major global producers extended an unpreceden­ted 9.7 million barrels per day supply cut agreement into July, while oil demand improved after countries across the globe eased lockdown measures.

However, global coronaviru­s cases exceeded 10 million on Sunday, as India and Brazil battled outbreaks of over 10,000 cases daily. New outbreaks are reported in countries including China, New Zealand and Australia, prompting government­s to impose restrictio­ns again.

“The second wave contagion is alive and well,” Howie Lee, an economist at Singapore’s OCBC bank, said.

“That is capping the bullish sentiment that we’ve seen in the last six to eight weeks.”

Other factors restrictin­g oil prices’ advance at this stage include poor refining margins, high oil inventorie­s and the resumption of US production, Lee said.

Despite efforts by Opec+ – the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and allies including Russia – to reduce supplies, crude inventorie­s in the US, the world’s largest oil producer and consumer, have hit all-time highs.

“There is also a risk that gains in prices recently could see some US shale producers restart wells,”

ANZ analysts said.

Even as the number of operating oil and natural gas rigs dropped to a record low last week, higher oil prices are prompting some producers to resume drilling.

“In the next one-two weeks, we should see an uptick in rig count commensura­te with the pick-up in oil production,” OCBC’S Lee said.

Elsewhere, US shale oil pioneer Chesapeake Energy Corp filed for bankruptcy protection on Sunday, as it bowed to heavy debts and the impact of the coronaviru­s outbreak on energy markets.

The Brent crude price is supported at US$39.80 a barrel while WTI’S support level is at US$37, OANDA senior market analyst Jeffrey Halley said, referring to technical charts.

“A daily close below these points will signal that a much deeper correction is upon oil markets,” he said, adding that a deteriorat­ing Covid-19 picture in the US would be the most likely driver of lower prices. —

 ?? AFP ?? Demand halt: Pump jacks operating in New Mexico. Bullish sentiment on the commodity has been capped by the Covid-19 pandemic. —
AFP Demand halt: Pump jacks operating in New Mexico. Bullish sentiment on the commodity has been capped by the Covid-19 pandemic. —

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