Oil hovers around $60 as U.S.-China trade tensions weigh
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[August 06, 2019] By
Shadia Nasralla
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices rebounded
slightly on Tuesday from big falls in recent sessions, but Brent crude
remained near seven-month lows around $60 a barrel due to escalating
trade tensions between China and the United States.
Brent prices have lost more than 9% in the past week, with U.S.
President Donald Trump vowing to impose new tariffs on Chinese imports
and China making further moves against U.S. agricultural cargoes.
The United States also responded to a decline in China's yuan on Monday
by branding the country a currency manipulator.
International benchmark Brent futures <LCOc1> were up 18 cents at $59.99
a barrel by 1005 GMT, having dipped earlier in the session to their
lowest since Jan. 14 at $59.07.
West Texas Intermediate crude <CLc1> futures rose 25 cents to $54.94 per
barrel.
"This morning's slight price recovery is hardly worthy of mention.
Concerns about demand and the escalating trade conflict are still
keeping the oil market in a stranglehold," Commerzbank analyst Carsten
Fritsch said in a note.
"As far as the oil market is concerned, there are two key questions: 1)
Why should China carry on buying U.S. crude oil? and 2) Why should China
continue to adhere to the U.S. sanctions when it comes to buying Iranian
oil?"
Global equities hit a two-month low <.MIWD00000PUS> and Brent fell more
than 3% on Monday as traders worried the dispute between the world's two
biggest oil buyers would dent demand, helping to prompt Tuesday's
short-covering.
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Crude oil is dispensed into a bottle in this illustration photo June
1, 2017. REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration
London's main stock market index <.FTSE> dropped for a sixth straight session on
Tuesday.
"It's difficult for oil to hold (up) when you have such moves in equities,"
Petromatrix analyst Olivier Jakob said.
Oil prices could find some support later on Tuesday, with a Reuters poll showing
U.S. crude oil inventories were expected to have fallen for an eighth
consecutive week. [API/S]
The American Petroleum Institute is set to release its weekly inventory data at
4:30 p.m. EDT (2030 GMT), with official government numbers to follow on
Wednesday.
On the supply side, Iran has threatened to block all energy exports out of the
Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of global oil traffic passes, if it is
unable to sell oil as promised by a 2015 nuclear deal in exchange for curbing
uranium enrichment.
Britain on Monday joined the United States in a maritime security mission in the
Gulf to protect merchant vessels after Iran seized a British-flagged vessel.
(Additional reporting by Koustav Samanta in SINGAPORE; Editing by Dale Hudson
and Kirsten Donovan)
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