Renewed lockdowns cause 4% slump on oil

OIL prices tumbled on Thursday, touching a five-month low and extending the previous day’s sharp decline on the impact renewed coronavirus lockdowns could have on oil demand.

December Brent crude futures settled lower at US$37.65 a barrel, down US$1.47, or 3.76%. During the session, the contract traded as low as US$36.64, the lowest in five months. The more active January contract lost 4% to US$38.11 a barrel.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures settled at US$36.17 a barrel, down US$1.22, or 3.26%. The contract touched its lowest since mid-June at US$34.92.

Both contracts plunged by more than 5% on Wednesday.

“People are reacting to COVID cases that are spiking – they are reacting to the number of new cases,” said New York’s Mizuho director of energy futures Bob Yawger. “The market was under additional pressure about demand concerns, as additional U.S. economic stimulus has not been forthcoming.”

With COVID-19 cases surging across Europe, France will require people to stay at home for all but essential activities from Friday, while Germany will shut bars, restaurants and theatres from Nov 2 until the end of the month.

“As lockdowns begin to bite on demand concerns across Europe, the near-term outlook for crude starts to deteriorate,” said Axi chief global market strategist Stephen Innes.

The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies will be monitoring the deteriorating demand outlook closely as well as rising supplies from OPEC member Libya.

OPEC and its allies, together known as OPEC+, plan on tapering production cuts in January 2021 from a current 7.7 million barrels per day (bpd) to about 5.7 million bpd.

“[We] believe it is increasingly unlikely that oil production will be stepped up from January,” Commerzbank said. “Instead, OPEC and its allies (OPEC+) would really need to implement further production cuts, given the weak prospects for demand.”

Libya is currently producing 680,000 bpd and expects production to rise to 1 million bpd in the next few weeks, a Libyan oil source said.

Oil had initially rebounded slightly from overnight losses in Asian morning trade on technical support and the prospect of tighter short-term supply as Hurricane Zeta slams Louisiana.

But the hurricane is forecast to weaken by Thursday morning in the United States and the return of U.S. production will add to existing oversupply. – Oct 30, 2020

Subscribe and get top news delivered to your Inbox everyday for FREE