Demand collapses, oil price hovers at US$30


(Bloomberg) – Oil clawed back some losses after collapsing below US$30 a barrel as the shutdown of swathes of the world’s economy triggers a meltdown in global fuel demand and the most volatile market on record.

Futures in New York recovered some ground after falling 9.6% to the lowest level in four years on Monday as a gauge of volatility jumped to the highest in data going back to 2007.

Governments are restricting the movement of people by closing their borders and banning travel, hammering fuel consumption and leading to the biggest daily drop in US gasoline prices since 2005.

As airlines cut the number of flights daily and a growing number of countries go into lock-down, oil markets are facing an unprecedented glut.

The slump in demand is coinciding with a supply flood as Saudi Arabia and Russia look to boost production as they engage in a price war for market share.

New York futures lost 23% last week, the most since December 2008.

“The quarantine measures mean that global fuel demand is going to be hit hard, and that comes on top of a supply shock,” said Vivek Dhar, a Melbourne-based analyst at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

“That timing has just been the worst-case scenario for oil.”

The turmoil in oil is being played out across financial markets, with Wall Street stocks suffering their biggest plunge since 1987 on Monday after President Donald Trump warned of a possible recession, with economic disruption from the coronavirus potentially extending into summer.

US equity futures advanced on Tuesday while stock markets in Asia were mixed.

Leaders of the Group of Seven said they will do “whatever is necessary” to ensure a globally coordinated response to the coronavirus pandemic and its economic fallout.

Trump markedly changed his tone on the outbreak and said Americans should avoid gathering in groups of more than 10 people, while Canada closed its borders to most foreigners.

France said it may further tighten a national lock-down, while Germany partially closed its borders with five neighbouring countries.

West Texas Intermediate for April delivery added US$1.10, or 3.8%, to US$29.80 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange as of 12.28pm in Singapore after falling to US$28.70 on Monday.

Brent for May settlement rose 58 cents to US$30.63 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange.

The contract slid 11.2% on Monday.

The spectacular plunge in prices hasn’t deterred Saudi Arabia from pumping historic levels of oil.

State-run Saudi Aramco plans to produce at its maximum capacity of 12 million barrels a day in April, Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser told investors, adding, “I doubt if May will be any different.”

The country is showing no sign of backing down in its price war with Russia, with Aramco saying it’s “very comfortable” with oil prices below US$30 a barrel.

The collapse in demand has brought gasoline prices in the US close to parity with WTI, briefly dipping below the US benchmark for the first time since 2009.

As recently as March 10, Nymex gasoline futures traded at a premium of almost US$18 a barrel to WTI.

Gasoline tumbled by 23% on Monday, the biggest drop since 2005.

It was up 7.5% at 74.13 cents a gallon in light volumes on Tuesday.

“There is no constructive bullish case to be made for oil right now,” said Jeffrey Halley, a senior market analyst at Oanda.

“I think Brent will settle between US$25-$30 a barrel range from here.”

 



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