Sunday, March 8, 2020

Oil takes biggest dive in over a decade as Russia, Opec split

Reuters 
More than 4.58 million US front-month crude contracts changed hands this week, the busiest week ever for that contract. [File, Standard]
Brent slid to its biggest daily loss in more than 11 years on Friday after Russia balked at Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' (Opec's) proposed steep production cuts to...
stabilise prices hit by economic fallout from the coronavirus, and Opec responded by removing limits on its own production.

 More than one million US crude contracts changed hands during the session, as the three-year pact between Opec and Russia ended in acrimony. "Prices plunged because the Opec confab ended up being an epic fail on the part of all involved. Russia has clearly decided to employ a scorched earth approach to the oil market: every country for itself," said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLC in New York. Brent futures had its biggest daily percentage fall since December 2008, down $4.72, or 9.4 per cent, to settle at Sh4,530 ($45.27) a barrel. It was Brent's lowest closing price since June 2017.
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US West Texas Intermediate crude dropped Sh465 ($4.62), or 10.1per cent, to Sh413 ($41.28), its lowest close since August 2016 and the largest daily percentage loss since November 2014. More than 4.58 million US front-month crude contracts changed hands this week, the busiest week ever for that contract. Both Brent and WTI are down over 30 per cent so far this year. The number of people infected with coronavirus across the world surpassed 100,000 as the outbreak reached more countries and the economic damage intensified. Business districts began to empty and stock markets tumbled. The split between Opec and Russia revived fears of a 2014 oil price crash, when Saudi Arabia and Russia fought for market share with US shale oil producers, which have never participated in output-limiting pacts. SEE ALSO :Ministry kicks off audit of Turkana oil pilot scheme
Opec was pushing for an additional 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) of cuts until the end of 2020. Non-Opec states were expected to contribute 500,000 bpd to the overall extra cut, Opec ministers said. The new deal would have meant Opec+ production curbs amounting to a total of 3.6 million bpd, or about 3.6 per cent of global supply. "From (April 1) all oil producers are allowed to produce as much as they like," analysts at ABN AMRO said in a report. The Dutch bank cut its Brent oil price forecast for 2020 by 15.5 per cent to $49 a barrel from the previous forecast of Sh580 ($58). The bank noted that Opec Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo indicated there will be more informal meetings on the proposed cuts in coming weeks, however.

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