Thursday 9 August 2018

Oil with heavy losses

Oil has serious losses yesterday, following the escalation of US-China trade pressure.
China said they will not surrender and have imposed new import duties on US goods worth over 16 billion dollars. At the same time, Trump threatened to impose $200 billion in customs duties on goods.
This has triggered a drop in brent of over 3%, to below $72 a barrel, on international markets. Earlier today, the raw material recovered some of its loss by adding 30 cents to 72.50 dollars a barrel.
US crude added 20 cents to $67.10 a barrel after a loss of 3.2 percent yesterday. To a large extent, oil prices are supported by fears that Iran's new sanctions will lead to a decline in supply.
Investors' fears are that the US-China trade war will enter the final phase, and the stake for both sides will be "all or nothing". And this, in turn, would lead to a serious slowdown in the US economy.
China is the largest importer of crude oil in the world, with an average of 8.48 million barrels a day, 8.18 million barrels per day a year earlier and 8.36 million barrels in June.
The US energy agency said yesterday that oil reserves had fallen by about 1.4 million barrels last week. However, gasoline stocks surprisingly rose by 2.9 million barrels.


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