Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Oil prices slip after weak Chinese data, OPEC+ meeting looms By
{Current column}3217People have watched
Introduction© Reuters. By Ambar Warrick --Oil prices sank on Monday after an unexpected drop in Chinese fac ...

By Ambar Warrick
--
Oil prices sank on Monday after an unexpected drop in Chinese factory activity raised concerns over slowing crude demand in the world’s second largest economy.
At 2339 GMT,Crude Oil WTI Futures sank 0.9% to $97.73 a barrel, while Brent Oil Futures dropped 0.6% to $103.39- extending their sharp declines in July. Crude oil prices shed over 7% in the previous month.
Chinese factory activity shrank in July amid a fresh round of COVID-related lockdowns, official data showed on Sunday. The purchasing manager’s index (PMI) fell to 49.0 in July from 50.2 in the previous month. A reading below 50 indicates a contraction.
A prolonged Chinese economic downturn is likely to weigh on global oil demand, given that the country is among the largest importers of crude oil. A brewing debt crisis in the country’s beleaguered real estate sector could also point to more economic weakness.
Focus now turns to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies (OPEC+), which is set to meet on Wednesday, August 3, to discuss future supply. Reports suggest the group is likely to either hold production at current levels, or slightly raise output.
The organization is by August expected to have fully phased out record supply cuts introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
The OPEC+ decision this week will be closely watched by traders, given that U.S. President Joe Biden has called on the group to increase output to stabilize the market.
Crude prices had jumped to near record highs earlier this year amid supply shocks from the Russia-Ukraine war. But they have since sharply consolidated their gains, amid concerns that rising inflation and a potential global economic recession will smother demand.
With the U.S. now logging two quarters of negative growth, and the European Central Bank also flagging a potential recession, demand for crude oil is expected to be dulled in the remainder of 2022.
The OPEC also recently forecast that crude oil demand is expected to rise at a slower pace in 2023 that 2022, indicating that a downturn could be prolonged.
Tags:
Related articles
Twitter to remove idle accounts, archive them By Reuters
{Current column}(Reuters) -Social media platform (NYSE:) will remove accounts that have been inactive for several y ...
Read more2月7日外汇交易提醒:美元从两周低位回升,欧元创近二年最大周涨幅 提供者 FX678
{Current column}2月7日外汇交易提醒:美元从两周低位回升,欧元创近二年最大周涨幅周五(2月4日)美元指数涨0.16%至95.48,稍早因欧元重拾升势,曾跌至两周低点95.13,但本周美元仍下跌了1.77%,为2020 ...
Read moreWall Street ends sharply higher, lifted by Big Tech By Reuters
{Current column}© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A 'Wall St' sign is seen above two 'One Way' signs in New York August 24, 201 ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Hong Kong stocks enter bear market as China outlook darkens By
- 亚马逊被英国监管机构指定为杂货商 需遵守相应准则 提供者 智通财经
- Dollar bides time before U.S. CPI; euro stabilizes after ECB pushback By Reuters
- Japan's 11
- Ron DeSantis takes aim at Disney, vows to void Florida theme park development agreement By Reuters
- U.S. adds Chinese entities to red
Latest articles
-
Crude oil slumps on demand concerns after weak Chinese data By
-
Russian attack on Ukraine possible 'any day' but diplomacy still an option
-
Danish pension fund ditches Wizz Air over labour rights By Reuters
-
美股早知道:春节期间美股三大指数表现不一,整体收涨 提供者
-
Stock market today: Dow closes lower as debt
-
亚马逊被英国监管机构指定为杂货商 需遵守相应准则 提供者 智通财经