GulfBase Live Support
30/04/2025 01:23 AST
Crude oil prices fell on Tuesday as investors lowered their demand growth expectations due to the ongoing trade war between the US and China, the world's two biggest economies.
Brent crude futures fell by 78 cents, or 1.18 percent, to $65.08 per barrel by 10:49 a.m. Saudi time. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell 75 cents, or 1.21 percent, to $61.30 a barrel. Both benchmarks fell more than $1 on Monday.
"Markets are closely monitoring the US-China trade negotiations, understanding that deteriorating trade relations between the world's two largest economies could lead the global economy toward a recession," said Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market analyst at Phillip Nova.
"The lack of confidence in future demand and the absence of concrete signals for demand revival in mainland China will continue to overshadow oil prices."
US President Donald Trump's push to reshape world trade by imposing tariffs on all US imports has created a high risk that the global economy will slip into a recession this year, according to a majority of economists in a Reuters poll.
China, hit with the steepest of those tariffs, has responded with its own levies against US imports, stoking a trade war between the top two oil consuming nations. That has prompted analysts to sharply lower their oil demand and price forecasts.
Barclays on Monday cut its 2025 Brent crude price forecast by $4 to $70 a barrel, citing elevated trade tensions and a pivot in production strategy by the OPEC+ group as drivers of a 1 million barrel per day oil supply surplus this year.
Meanwhile, several members of OPEC+, which comprises the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, will suggest an acceleration of output hikes for a second consecutive month in June, sources told Reuters last week.
"A substantial (oil) price decrease appears probable if exporting countries boost production," oil analyst Philip Verleger said in a note.
US crude oil stockpiles also likely rose by about 500,000 barrels in the week ended April 15, according to a preliminary Reuters poll of analysts on Monday.
Industry group American Petroleum Institute will publish its estimates on US oil inventories on Tuesday. Official figures from the Energy Information Administration will follow on Wednesday.
Reuters
06/05/2025
Qatari banks' exposure to the UK totalled about £4.8bn with investments and credit facilities accounting for a significant portion of this exposure, according to the UK-based Centre of Economics and
Gulf Times
06/05/2025
Saudi Arabia's banking sector continued its robust lending expansion in March, with total credit reaching SR3.1 trillion ($827.2 billion), marking a 16.26 percent year-on-year increase.
Acc
Arab News
02/05/2025
TotalEnergies and OQ Exploration and Production on Thursday celebrated the ground-breaking of the Marsa LNG plant, in the port of Sohar, northern Oman.
This comes one year after the final i
Trade Arabia
Ticker | Price | Volume |
---|
(In US Dollar) | Change | Change(%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Brent | 61.29 | -0.84 | -1.35 |
WTI | 58.29 | -0.95 | -1.6 |
OPEC Basket | 61.88 | -1.81 | -2.84 |
06/05/2025
Oil prices fell more than $1 a barrel on Monday as OPEC+ is set to further speed up oil output hikes, spurring concerns about more supply coming into a market clouded by an uncertain demand outlook,
Reuters
05/05/2025
Eight OPEC+ member states, including Saudi Arabia, have agreed to raise oil production by 411,000 barrels per day in June as part of a gradual rollback of voluntary output cuts, the group has announc
Arab News
30/04/2025
Oil prices extended declines on Wednesday and were set for their largest monthly drop in more than three years as the global trade war eroded the outlook for fuel demand, while fears of mounting supp
Reuters
29/04/2025
Oil prices inched higher on Monday though remained dogged by uncertainty over trade talks between the US and China, clouding the outlook for global growth and fuel demand, while the prospect of OPEC+
Reuters
28/04/2025
Oil prices inched higher on Monday though remained dogged by uncertainty over trade talks between the US and China, clouding the outlook for global growth and fuel demand, while the prospect of OPEC+
Reuters