Oil falls as geopolitical tensions ease, China COVID concerns return
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[November 17, 2022] By
Emily Chow
SINGAPORE, Nov 17
(Reuters) - Oil prices fell for a second day in early Asian trade on
Thursday as concerns over geopolitical tensions eased and rising numbers
of COVID-19 cases in China added to demand worries in the world's
largest crude importer.
Brent crude LCOc1 futures dropped by 62 cents, or 0.7%, to $92.24 a
barrel by 0110 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude CLc1
futures fell 65 cents, or 0.8%, to $84.94 a barrel.
Brent dropped by 1.1% and WTI declined by 1.5% on Wednesday after
Russian oil shipments via the Druzhba pipeline to Hungary restarted.
"Crude oil fell after NATO cleared Russia's missile attack on Poland,
while demand concerns (are) back to trader's focus amid ongoing China's
COVID curbs and gloomy global economic outlooks," said Tina Teng, an
analyst at CMC Markets.
Poland and military alliance NATO said on Wednesday that a missile which
crashed inside Poland was probably a stray fired by Ukraine's air
defenses and not a Russian strike, easing fears of the war between
Russian and Ukraine spilling across the border.
Oil prices eased despite a larger-than-expected draw in crude oil
stockpiles in the United States, added Teng.
Crude stocks in the U.S., the world's biggest oil consumer, fell by 5.4
million barrels in the week ended Nov. 11 to 435.4 million barrels, the
Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday, compared with
expectations in a Reuters poll for a 440,000-barrel drop.
[to top of second column] |
However, inventories of gasoline and distillate fuels
both rose by more than expectations. Read full story
More oil is set to flow to the U.S. as TC Energy lifted a force
majeure on its 622,000-barrel-per-day Keystone pipeline that
supplies the Midwest and Gulf Coast that had reduced shipments by
7%. Read full story
Sustained concerns of demand weakness in China are also "keeping
markets grounded," said Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset
Management, as it continues to report more COVID cases in major
cities.
"With COVID cases in China continuing to rise, especially as we move
towards flu season, traders are left with little option to
recalibrate positions reflecting the possibility of more lockdowns
in heavily populated centers that hurt oil demand exponentially more
than other areas of the economy," said Innes.
China's COVID caseload is small compared with the rest of the world,
but it maintains stringent policies to quash out cases before they
further spread.
The National Health Commission reported 23,276 new COVID-19
infections on Nov. 16, of which over 20,000 were asymptomatic.
(Reporting by Emily Chow; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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