Oil slumps as Norway strike ends after successful talks

Bloomberg

Crude prices slid after oil workers in Norway called off a strike that had shut down about 8% of the country’s production.
Futures in London and New York both fell over 1%. The settlement will restore production at six fields already shut down by the dispute and prevent an escalation to another six. It also averts the shutdown of Norway’s largest oil field, the 460,000 barrel-a-day Johan Sverdrup facility.
Still, Brent futures posted the largest weekly gain since early June and US benchmark crude futures also advanced this week on supply disruptions from Hurricane Delta and optimism on a US stimulus deal.
“If the strike would have lasted into next week or even beyond, that would mean a significant additional amount of platforms and fields that were impacted by the strike,” Gary Cunningham, a director at Tradition Energy. “Now that it’s resolved, not only are the incremental curtailments not going to happen, but now the original production is going to come back online.”
Futures were boosted amid President Donald Trump’s departure from the hospital following treatment for Covid-19 and mounting enthusiasm over a US virus aid package, which would help spur a demand recovery. The coronavirus pandemic has been forcing governments worldwide to rethink reopening plans: Spain’s government has declared a state of emergency for the Madrid region and in the US, Texas virus hospitalisations jumped to a four-week high.
Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin headed into talks with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, carrying a White House offer of $1.8 trillion for economic stimulus, according to people familiar with the matter. The two spoke for about 30 minutes and Mnuchin’s proposal “attempted to address some of the concerns Democrats have,” Pelosi spokesman Drew
Hammill said on Twitter.
“This is a very positive development,” said John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC. “The petroleum complex needs a stimulus package as badly as any of the other asset classes, maybe even more so. To the extent that this gets the economy sort of stabilised, or maybe
revived, that portends well for
demand going forward.”
Meanwhile, Hurricane Delta has weakened to a Category 2 storm with winds of 110 miles (177 kilometers) per hour. Energy companies have evacuated staff from offshore and onshore facilities. Currently, 1.7 million barrels a day of oil output in the Gulf of Mexico shut in.

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