BusinessEnergy

Oil prices slip again on demand concerns

The oil price decline came during a broader sell-off in world markets, with shares falling and expectations of fading global growth hitting riskier assets

Oil prices fell slightly on Wednesday, hovering at their lowest levels since December after plunging more than 4% the previous day on signs of a weak global economy, lacklustre oil demand, and expectations of an end to a dispute halting Libyan exports.

The oil price decline came during a broader sell-off in world markets, with shares falling and expectations of fading global growth hitting riskier assets.

That poses a challenge for OPEC+, which Reuters reported last week was still set to proceed with a planned oil output hike from October. Any further increase in supply could push prices even lower.

Brent crude futures fell 17 cents, or 0.2%, to $73.58 by 0916 GMT, after the previous session’s fall of 4.9%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were down 20 cents, or 0.3%, at $70.14, after dropping 4.4% on Tuesday.

Both benchmarks had fallen by $1 in earlier trading on Wednesday, “amid expectations of a potential deal to resolve the dispute in Libya,” said Toshitaka Tazawa, an analyst at Fujitomi Securities Co Ltd, referring to a clash between rival factions over control of oil revenue that had cut the North African’s crude output by half and curbed exports.

Libya’s two legislative bodies agreed on Tuesday to jointly appoint a central bank governor within 30 days, potentially defusing the battle. The central bank is the sole legal repository for oil revenue and pays state salaries across Libya.

Oil exports at major Libyan ports were halted on Monday and production cut nationwide. Libya’s National Oil Corp (NOC) declared force majeure on its El Feel oilfield from 2 September.

“The market remained under pressure also because of concerns over sluggish fuel demand following weak economic indicators from China and the United States,” Tazawa said.

Recent data from China, the world’s biggest crude importer, showed manufacturing activity sank to a six-month low in August, when growth in new home prices slowed.

Asaase Broadcasting Company airs on Asaase 99.5 Accra, Asaase 98.5 Kumasi, Asaase 99.7 Tamale, Asaase 100.3 Cape Coast, AsaasePa 107.3 (Accra).
Affiliates: Bawku FM 101.5, Bead FM 99.9 (Bimbilla), Mining City Radio 89.5 (Tarkwa), Nandom FM 101.9, Nyatefe Radio 94.5 (Dzodze), Sissala Radio 96.3 (Tumu), Somuaa FM 89.9 (Gushegu), Stone City 90.7 (Ho) and Wale FM 106.9 (Walewale).

Listen online: 
asaaseradio.com, Sound Garden and TuneIn.
Follow us:
X
@asaaseradio995@Asaase985ksi@Asaase997tamale@asaase1003asaasepa1073
Instagram
asaaseradio99.5asaase985ksiasaase100.3asaase99.7tamaleasaasepa107.3
LinkedIn
company/asaaseradio995TikTok@asaaseradio99.5
Facebook
asaase99.5asaase985ksiAsaase100.3asaase99.7AsaasePa107.3.
YouTube
AsaaseRadioXtra.
Join the conversation. Accra: call 020 000 9951/054 888 8995, WhatsApp 020 000 0995. Kumasi: call 059 415 7985 or call/WhatsApp 020 631 5260. Tamale: call/WhatsApp/SMS 053 554 6468. Cape Coast: call/WhatsApp 059 388 2652.

#AsaaseRadio
#AsaasePa
#TheVoiceofOurLand

Views: 40

Source
Reuters
Show More

Related Articles

Back to top button

Adblock Detected

ALLOW OUR ADS