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Oil falls over 5% on Russia-Ukraine talk hopes, China lockdowns

Published 03/13/2022, 09:51 PM
Updated 03/14/2022, 03:16 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A customer fills-up his car with diesel at a gas station in Nice March 4, 2013. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

By Scott DiSavino

NEW YORK (Reuters) -Oil prices fell more than 5% on Monday to the lowest in nearly two weeks amid hopes for progress toward a diplomatic end to Russia's invasion of Ukraine - a development that would boost global supplies - while a pandemic-linked travel ban in China cast doubt on demand.

Brent futures fell $5.77, or 5.1%, to settle at $106.90 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude fell $6.32, or 5.8%, to settle at $103.01.

That was the lowest close for WTI since Feb. 28 and the lowest for Brent since March 1. Both benchmarks have surged since Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine and are up roughly 36% so far this year.

"Oil prices are reflecting a bearish sentiment drawn from expectations of positive developments in the latest round of Russia-Ukraine negotiations," said Kaushal Ramesh, an analyst at energy research provider Rystad Energy.

Russian and Ukrainian delegations held a fourth round of talks on Monday - by video link rather than in person in neighboring Belarus as in the past - but no new progress was announced. Ukraine said it held the talks with Russia on a ceasefire, immediate withdrawal of troops and security guarantees despite the fatal shelling of a residential building in Kyiv.

Brent and WTI have logged their most volatile 30 days since June 2020.

Analysts at energy consulting group EBW Analytics noted that "a renewed COVID outbreak in China is leading to rising shutdowns as Omicron spreads rapidly," which could reduce global energy demand since China is the world's largest importer of oil, liquefied natural gas and coal.

A northeastern Chinese province imposed a rare travel ban due to an Omicron outbreak.

Russia's output of oil and gas condensate rose to 11.12 million barrels per day (bpd) so far in March, two sources familiar with production data told Reuters, despite sanctions.

The United States has banned Russian oil imports and Britain said it would phase them out by the end of 2022. Russia is the world's top exporter of crude and oil products combined, shipping about 7 million bpd or 7% of global supplies.

A senior minister said British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was trying to persuade Saudi Arabia to boost oil output, while International Energy Agency (IEA) chief Fatih Birol urged oil-producing countries to pump more.

European Union member states have agreed on a fourth package of sanctions against Russia, the office of the French EU presidency wrote on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR). It did not include Russian energy exports.

"Energy traders quickly abandoned the crude trade after the next round of EU sanctions spared oil from Russian companies," said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at data and analytics firm OANDA.

India indicated it could release more oil from national stocks.

Indian officials also said New Delhi was considering a Russian offer to buy crude and other commodities at discounted prices via a rupee-rouble transaction.

The United States needs to make a decision to wrap up a deal to salvage Iran's 2015 nuclear accord with world powers, the Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson said. Some feared talks might collapse, and 49 of 50 Republican U.S. senators said they would not back a new nuclear deal.

Analysts said an agreement with Iran could add another 1 million bpd of oil supply to the market, but noted that would not be enough to offset declining supply from Russia.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A customer fills-up his car with diesel at a gas station in Nice March 4, 2013. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

The U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to start raising interest rates this week, which should boost the dollar. This could push down oil prices by making dollar-denominated oil more expensive for holders of foreign currencies.

Crude stockpiles at the Cushing storage hub in Oklahoma rose last week for the first time this year, traders said, referring to a report from data provider Genscape. U.S. government data has shown stockpiles there falling for nine weeks in a row.

Latest comments

please, tell chinese government that spooky stories about omicron and pandemic won't work anymore. a whole pandemic, stopped in 2 3 days, and everything going to normal, what a roleplay🤣
please tell the gullible US citizens who are masking right back up this week
bien will try to push their market lower to avoid rate hike. but its out of his control market will absorb this shock till rate hike.
Oil dumps just long enough so Powell can justify 25 basis points. Back to $130 by Thursday noon. One corrupt, filthy mess.
Hopes and Dreams. For the love of god, Shut up about Ukraine until something actually happens.
Litarally a never ending back and forth over possitive and negative talks. This wae wnds when Putin says it will end. Nothing has changed.
The world is gonna be done with Covid and Chinas gonna be just getting started with zero immunity and bad vaccines
does OPEC know russia is selling crude heavily discounted?
china is imploding under Xi. he's pretty much ruined their economy pretty quickly. although maybe they reached a point they were ok with. and now is time to push their ideals. I think it would have been smarter to stay on their previous path - much easier to make people comply when you're also taking them all out of poverty. but now they're sort of pushing them back into it. insane amounts of lockdowns too
hopefully they make the best of what they have made from high gas rates, and start oil spill clean/company closure. there's no need to track to Russia for oil Asia and Africa have always been open for honest business
I love that code word hope. That's no way to make any plans for investment
next sanction should be against rosatom...
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