Oil prices fall in Asia following sharp gains

NEW DELHI: Oil prices has retreated, taking a chunk out of the previous day’s rally as investors digested data suggesting last week’s plunge in US stockpiles was likely a one-off.

Both main contracts soared more than two dollars Thursday after the energy department said US inventories dropped 14.5 million barrels, the sharpest rate in 17 years.

But analysts said the decline was attributed to the suspension of Importsand shutdown of some production due to Hurricane Hermine, which passed through the Gulfof Mexico in late August, and warned of a rebound next week. “The reason behind the enormous drawdown is transitory, and does not influence the demand-supply situation of the oil market,” said IG market strategist Bernard Aw in a note. “One week’s worth of data does not make a trend.” At about 0250 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was down 40 cents at USD 47.22 and Brent fell 44 cents to USD 49.55. Traders are awaiting a meeting of OPEC and Russialater this month aimed at addressing a two-year-old global supply glut and overproduction that saw prices hit a near 13-year low below USD 30 at the start of 2016. While officials from Russiaand OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia have sought to sooth concerns ahead of the gathering, experts are sceptical whether an agreement can be reached. A previous attempt at a production cap in April were derailed by Iran, which refused to join in talks as it ramped up out output following years of Western-imposed nuclear-linked sanctions.—PTI

See also  NPST Strengthens Board, Appoints Veteran Banker Ram Rastogi as an Independent Director

Author

Related Posts

About The Author

Contact Us