Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Oil Sinks as Weak Chinese Imports Fuel Demand Concerns By
{Current column}77People have watched
Introduction© Reuters. By Ambar Warrick -- Oil prices sank in early trade on Monday, extending losses from ...

By Ambar Warrick
-- Oil prices sank in early trade on Relatively good foreign exchange dealersMonday, extending losses from last week as signs of weak Chinese consumption raised concerns over slowing demand for crude.
As of 2004 ET (0004 GMT), Crude Oil WTI Futures sank 0.9% to $88.19 a barrel, while Brent Oil Futures dropped 0.6% to $94.06. Both contracts were trading at their lowest levels since late-January.
Strength in the U.S. dollar - following a stellar payrolls reading last week- also weighed on crude prices on Monday. Market expectations for a sharp interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve are growing in the wake of the data.
Crude markets were dealt a fresh blow by data from China showing that imports grew at a weaker-than-expected rate in July- furthering a trend of slowing demand in one of the world’s largest oil importers.
While imports did grow at a faster pace than last month, they were the second-lowest reading seen this year. Still, China logged a record-high trade surplus as exports remained robust.
Economic activity in China has been severely dented by COVID-19 lockdowns this year, with an official reading last week showing that the manufacturing sector contracted in July. The data, coupled with dismal manufacturing prints from across the globe, saw oil prices mark their worst week since the March 2020 COVID crash.
Stronger-than-expected U.S. payrolls data on Friday also saw investors expecting a steep interest rate hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve next month- a move that is negative for oil markets.
But a further drop in oil prices could ease inflationary pressures- given that rising fuel rates have been the biggest contributor to inflation this year.
Focus now turns to a swathe of key inflation data from the United States, China, and the Eurozone- due later this week. Higher-than-expected readings could fuel more concerns over increased monetary tightening by the Fed, dragging down oil prices.
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
Hawkers back on China's streets as economic recovery teeters By Reuters
{Current column}By Nicoco Chan and Ellen ZhangSHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) - Wang Chunxiang pushes a cart around busy ...
Read moreEuropean stocks higher; UBS leads banking sector with CEO reappointment By
{Current column}By Peter Nurse - European stock markets traded higher Wednesday, with UBS leading the banking sector ...
Read moreHas anyone else had Tigersbrkers ask for a $1,150 “compliance clearance payment”
{Current column}I thought I was the only one until I started digging online. My withdrawal request was fully approve ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Dow futures gain ahead of public holiday By
- Can you believe IVY Markets is telling me I owe $1,375 in “tax clearance”
- Is BrightFunded a legit or a scam? BrightFunded Review
- Is this platform called FXTM reliable
- Amazon, Snap, Pinterest fall premarket; Intel, Exxon rise By
- How unbelievable that Bits Capital Market refuses to release my $9,000 withdrawal
Latest articles
-
Oil climbs after US leaders strike provisional debt deal By Reuters
-
Republican Senator Rand Paul blocks bid to ban Chinese
-
Yellen to chair previously unscheduled FSOC meeting on Friday
-
European stock futures flat; Eurozone inflation release looms large By
-
Futures muted after jobs data raises odds of more rate hikes By Reuters
-
Is this platform called FXTM reliable