Oil Slides 4% on China Virus Curbs, Climate Warning

By Dmitry Zhdannikov
Monday, August 9, 2021

Oil prices fell by 4% on Monday, extending last week's steep losses on the back of a rising U.S. dollar and concerns that new coronavirus-related restrictions in Asia, especially China, could slow a global recovery in fuel demand.

A United Nations panel's dire warning on climate change also added to the gloomy mood after fires in Greece have razed homes and forests and parts of Europe suffered deadly floods last month.

Brent crude futures fell by $2.82, or 4.2%, to $67.88 a barrel by 0930 GMT after a 6% slump last week for their biggest weekly loss in four months.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell $2.85, or 4.3%, to $65.43 after plunging by nearly 7% last week. On Monday the contract fell as low as $65.15, its lowest since May.

"Concerns about potential global oil demand erosion have resurfaced with the acceleration of the Delta variant infection rate," RBC analyst Gordon Ramsay said in a note.

ANZ analysts pointed to new restrictions in China, the world's second-largest oil consumer, as a major factor clouding the outlook for demand growth.

The restrictions include flight cancellations, warnings by 46 cities against travel and limits on public transport and taxi services in 144 of the worst hit areas.

On Monday China reported 125 new COVID-19 cases, up from 96 a day earlier. In Malaysia and Thailand, infections hit daily records.

China's export growth slowed more than expected in July after outbreaks of COVID-19 cases and floods while import growth was also weaker than expected.

"Both (benchmark crude) contracts look vulnerable to more bad news on the virus front, focusing on mainland China," OANDA senior market analyst Jeffrey Halley said in a note.

China's crude oil imports fell in July and were down sharply from the record levels of June 2020.

A rally in the U.S. dollar to a four-month high against the euro also weighed on oil prices after Friday's stronger than expected U.S. jobs report spurred bets that the Federal Reserve could move more quickly to tighten U.S. monetary policy.

(Reuters)

Categories: Offshore Offshore Energy Industry News Oil Price Markets

Related Stories

Major Oil and Gas Projects Drive Strong OSV Demand in the Middle East

How Hot Is Your Cable? Understanding Subsea Cable Thermal Performance

US Pressure on India Could Propel Russia's Shadow Oil Exports

Seatrium Secures ABS Backing for Deepwater FPSO Design

MDL Secures Cable Laying Job in Asia Pacific

POSH Set to Tow Nguya FLNG from China to Eni’s Congo Field

Synergy Marine Group Completes Conversion of LNG Vessel to FSRU

Saipem Wins FEED Contract For Abadi LNG Project FPSO Module In Indonesia

Allseas-Boskalis Consortium Bags $1.4B Offshore Gas Pipeline Job in Taiwan

Woodside Finds South Korean Partners to Advance LNG Value Chain

Current News

Malaysia Issues First Offshore CCS Permit to Petronas Subsidiary

Sponsored: Record Deals and Record Attendance Underscore ADIPEC’s Global Impact

Sponsored: Energy and Finance Chiefs Call for Sound Policy, Stable Frameworks at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Energy Sector Urged to Scale AI Adoption at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Policy, AI, and Capital Take Center Stage at ADIPEC 2025

Major Oil and Gas Projects Drive Strong OSV Demand in the Middle East

ABL to Support Platform Installations, Rig Moves for Chevron in Gulf of Thailand

PTTEP Orders OneSubsea Systems for Two Deepwater Projects off Malaysia

Russia's Lukoil Takes Up Gunvor’s Offer for Foreign Assets

How Hot Is Your Cable? Understanding Subsea Cable Thermal Performance

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com