Oil drops on India’s COVID-19 crisis, U.S. pipeline resumption

Updated : May 13, 2021, 15:01 UTC1min read
TOKYO (Reuters) -Oil prices fell 1% on Thursday as India’s coronavirus crisis deepened, halting a rally that had lifted crude to an eight-week high after the IEA and OPEC forecast a rebound in global demand.
Most Popular

By Shadia Nasralla

LONDON (Reuters) -Oil prices fell more than 2% on Thursday as India’s coronavirus crisis deepened and a key U.S. pipeline resumed operations, halting a rally that had lifted crude to an eight-week high after the IEA and OPEC forecast a rebound in global demand later in the year.

Advertisement
Know where WTI Crude Oil is headed? Take advantage now with

Your capital is at risk

Brent crude was down $1.75, or 2.5%, at $67.57 a barrel by 1315 GMT, after rising 1% on Wednesday. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was down $1.80, or 2.7%, to $64.28 a barrel, having risen 1.2% in the previous session.

If those losses are sustained, both contracts would mark their biggest daily drops in percentage terms since early April.

In a bearish signal for oil demand, a variant of the coronavirus has swept through the countryside in India, the world’s third-biggest importer of crude.

Medical professionals have not been able to say when new infections will plateau and other countries are alarmed over the transmissibility of the variant that is now spreading worldwide.

“Concerns are growing that the untamed spread of the coronavirus in India and in Southeast Asia will dent oil demand,” PVM analysts said in a note.

“Its impact, however, is expected to be relatively brief and the second half of the year will see the healthy revival of oil demand growth.”

Meanwhile, fuel shortages worsened in the southeastern United States, six days after the shutdown of the Colonial Pipeline, the largest U.S. fuel pipeline network, following a ransomware attack.

Signalling a recovery, the U.S. pipeline on Thursday moved some of the first millions of gallons of motor fuels.

The dollar also strengthened compared with a basket of other currencies, making oil more expensive for holders of other currencies.

(Reporting by Shadia Nasralla; Additional reporting by Aaron Sheldrick; Editing by Susan Fenton and Jane Merriman)

Don't miss a thing! Sign up for a daily update delivered to your inbox

Latest Articles

See All