© Sergei
Karpukhin / Reuters
|
A key oil benchmark
plunged below US$31 per barrel Tuesday, continuing the downward trend of the
previous day. Brent crude traded as low as US$30.50 on the market.
RT
USA report continues:
US
crude benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) fell as low as US$30.47. A number
of factors have combined to put pressure on global crude prices. Oil is dipping
to decade-low levels amid overproduction and bad economic news from China,
where poor prospects for manufacturing suggest that the leading oil-consuming
country will not need as much crude as producers hoped.
US
stockpiles rose by 2 million barrels last week, according to a Bloomberg survey
released before the Energy Information Administration report on Wednesday.
Additionally,
US crude oil exports have restarted last week for the first time in four
decades after Washington lifted the 40-year ban.
Iran
is expected to launch its own oil benchmark in March as soon as international
sanctions blocking exports are lifted.
“When
you have a supply overhang, there’s going to be continued downward pressure on
prices,” Ric Spooner, a chief analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney told Bloomberg.
“Investors
are looking toward a difficult few months for oil, especially with Iran set to
boost exports. We are likely to see production cuts at these prices, but they
may take some months to come through.”
Saudi
Arabia, the leading country in OPEC, is regarded by many as the main plotter of
the crude price collapse. According to Russia’s Energy Minister Aleksandr
Novak, Saudi Arabia has destabilized the crude market by increasing its oil
output to the tune of 1.5 million barrels a day.
Tuesday
also saw the Russian ruble falling to its lowest exchange rate against major
currencies since 2014. The Russian currency traded at over 77 rubles against
the US dollar at the opening of trade on the Moscow Stock Exchange. The ruble also
fell to 83 against the euro, its lowest level in over a year.
Morgan Stanley has warned
that a rapid appreciation of the US dollar may send Brent crude as low as US$20
a barrel.
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