Oil price rally fades

Image
AFP London
Last Updated : May 06 2016 | 9:22 PM IST
World oil prices slumped this week, retreating from 2016 highs, as the dollar rebounded and supply glut concerns returned to the fore despite disruptions to global production.
Even though the dollar fell back once more today in the wake of poorly-received US jobs data, oil prices remained subdued. A weaker US currency tends to make dollar-denominated crude cheaper for buyers holding rival currencies, spurring demand.
Benchmark contracts Brent North Sea Crude and West Texas Intermediate had last week struck the highest points since early November, with Brent reaching close to USD 49 a barrel.
By today however, Brent was trading at USD 44.43 a barrel and WTI had slid to USD 43.74, a drop of around USD 3.0 week- on-week for the US benchmark.
"The oil price rally is faltering," said Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch, adding that a series of events, such as lower production in the United States and disruptions to supplies in Canada and Libya, had failed to provide the expected support.
Fritsch said in a client note that this marked "a shift in sentiment on the oil market which could also weigh further on prices in the near future".

Also Read

Traders today focused on the US jobs report, which showed that an economic slowdown in the world's biggest economy and oil-consuming nation hit hiring by companies and government authorities last month. A total of just 160,000 net new jobs were created in April, the lowest level this year, the Labor Department reported.
The jobs growth figure was well below expectations and pointed to the impact of the sharp slowdown of the US economy to a 0.5 per cent growth rate in the first quarter of the year. Analysts had expected a modest slowdown from March to about 207,000 jobs.
Oil prices did manage a brief rally yesterday as raging forest fires in Canada struck Alberta's oil sands region. Authorities have since ordered the evacuation of its 100,000 people after firefighters, backed by air tankers and helicopters, failed to prevent the monster blaze from engulfing entire neighbourhoods.
Prices have meanwhile failed to win support from news of an attack on an offshore oil facility in Nigeria, operated by US oil group Chevron.
There was no immediate indication of the volume of crude affected but a Chevron official, who asked not to be identified, said the attack would hit gas supply to power plants already affected by almost daily outages.

More From This Section

First Published: May 06 2016 | 9:22 PM IST

Next Story