Oil Prices Continue to Tumble
06 July 2016 - 9:30PM
Dow Jones News
Crude oil prices extended losses Wednesday, having fallen
sharply in the previous session, as commodities continue to get
hammered by risk-off sentiment after last month's Brexit vote
fueled uncertainty about global growth prospects.
Prices tumbled more than 4% on Tuesday as a pickup in U.S.
drilling activity gave rise to fears of a slowdown in the country's
production decline.
Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, fell 0.7% to $47.62 a
barrel in Wednesday midmorning trade on London's ICE Futures
exchange. On the New York Mercantile Exchange, West Texas
Intermediate futures were trading down 0.6% at $46.33 a barrel.
"Driven by renewed fears over economic contagion from the U.K.'s
decision to exit the European Union and severe problems in the
Italian banking sector, global risk assets were down across the
board," Vienna-based consultancy JBC Energy said in a note.
Sterling remained weak, having earlier dropped to a 31-year low,
pushing the U.S. dollar higher and thereby making oil more
expensive for holders of other currencies. The Wall Street Journal
Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of other
currencies, was up 0.04% on Wednesday.
Analysts say even though the U.K. accounts for less than 2% of
the world's oil demand, its decision to leave the EU will rattle
investor confidence in the region, which has been grappling with
economic headwinds for years.
Two big British asset managers blocked investors from pulling
money out of real-estate funds on Tuesday, while the Bank of
England took steps to allow British banks to lend more, as markets
continued to react to the Brexit vote.
The rebound in oil prices from 13-year lows in the first quarter
to more than $50 a barrel last month has prompted investors and
analysts to warn of a rise in new U.S. production, which would have
the impact of reversing price gains.
"Fundamentally, supply and demand continues to shift into
deficit," said Dominic Haywood, an analyst at Energy Aspects,
adding that this trend depends to some extent on what happens with
U.S. production going forward.
A recent pickup in U.S. drilling activity is tempering optimism
on prices, as producers have put more rigs to work since late
May.
According to an analyst survey by pricing agency Platts, U.S.
crude inventory likely declined by 2.6 million barrels in the week
ended July 1, while gasoline stocks are expected to have fallen by
900,000 barrels.
If the official inventory data slated for release Thursday
confirms its estimates, Platts said it would mark the seventh
straight weekly decline in crude stocks, but fall short of the
average 3.4 million-barrel-draw seen the last five years for the
same reporting period.
Previous supply disruptions in Canada and Nigeria helped to take
some surplus barrels offline, but output from those countries is
gradually resuming.
Nymex reformulated gasoline blendstock—the benchmark gasoline
contract—fell 2% to $1.40 a gallon. ICE gasoil changed hands at
$423.25 a metric ton, down $0.75 from the previous settlement.
Write to Sarah McFarlane at sarah.mcfarlane@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 06, 2016 07:15 ET (11:15 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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