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Oil dropped 2% to its lowest this month on Tuesday after two sessions of gains, as deepening concerns of an economic slowdown and a stronger dollar outweighed hopes of higher Chinese demand.
Brent crude fell by $1.96, or 2.4%, to settle at $80.77 a barrel, its lowest close since March 31, before OPEC announced plans to cut production.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude dropped $1.69, or 2.2%, to close at $77.07, also its lowest this month.
On Monday, both contracts rose by more than 1%.
The energy sector is off to a mixed to lower start, driven by weakness in the underlying commodities and in the major equity futures which fell this morning as the markets continue to digest earnings.
After two-straight days of strong gains, WTI and Brent crude oil futures slid lower this morning, pressured by global economic outlook concerns and strength in the dollar which outweighed optimism about growing demand in China and expectations of a drop in U.S. crude inventories. Traders remain wary about central banks potentially raising interest rates further to curb inflation, a move that would further dampen economic growth and dent energy demand. Futures found a floor thanks to investor optimism that holiday travel in China would boost fuel demand and by expectations that the latest EIA report will show U.S. crude dropped 1.7 million barrels last week.
Natural gas futures dropped ~2.6% this morning, erasing yesterday’s gains amid moderating weather forecast that should stunt demand.
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