Oil declines as virus fears intensifies beyond China

Bloomberg

Oil fell as the coronavirus outbreak accelerated beyond China, intensifying concerns about the infection’s economic fallout.
Futures fell 0.9% in New York. China revised how it calculates infection totals for the third time this month, raising questions about data reliability and confirming the virus’s growing reach. Meanwhile, a key IHS Markit gauge of factories and service providers in the world’s largest economy dropped for the first time in seven years, sparking sell-offs in government bonds and equities.
“The market is seeing a broad risk-off move,” said Jan Stuart, global energy economist at Cornerstone Macro. “Just when the outbreak was beginning to turn, the new cases are making investors wonder if we have more to worry about.”
Oil has fallen more than 12% this year as China’s viral outbreak crippled industrial activity and transportation at a time when energy supplies already were abundant.

There was no move in the structure however, backwardation in Brent held. Oil followed the move down as investors took money off the table.”
Oil has fallen more than 12% this year as China’s viral outbreak crippled industrial activity and transportation at a time when energy supplies already were abundant. The World Health Organisation (WHO) said if countries don’t respond strongly now, the spread outside China may become a wider threat.
Still, crude posted a second consecutive weekly gain, supported by supply disruptions in Venezuela and Libya.
West Texas Intermediate for April delivery fell 50 cents to settle at $53.38 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, ending the week 2.6% higher.
Brent for April settlement declined 81 cents to settle at $58.50 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange putting its premium over WTI at $5.12. The global benchmark rose 2.1% for the week.
The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and its allies will meet in March as originally scheduled after efforts by Saudi Arabia to hold an emergency meeting failed to materialize amid resistance from Russia. Saudi Arabia’s energy minister dismissed a Dow Jones report on Friday that Riyadh was considering a break from its four-year oil production alliance with Russia. Russia has remained noncommittal to an Opec proposal for additional production cuts.
“Saudi Arabia needs the production cuts more than Russia,” said Ryan Fitzmaurice, commodities strategist at Rabobank. “Russia will eventually come to the table in March and participate but Saudi Arabia will likely shoulder most of burden to get them to come on board.”

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