Saturday, 24 May 2025

Oil prices fall on concerns over recession, China COVID curbs

Oil prices fell by more than $1 on Tuesday as concerns over a possible recession and China’s COVID-19 curbs outweighed an expectation of tight global supply and a pick-up in fuel demand with the U.S. summer driving season, Reuters reported.

Brent crude futures for July fell $1.34, or 1.2%, to $112.08 a barrel by 0606 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures for July delivery dropped $1.28, or 1.2%, to $109.01 a barrel.

Brent gained 0.7% on Monday while WTI settled nearly flat.

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Multiple threats to the global economy topped the worries of the world’s well-heeled at the annual Davos economic summit, with some flagging the risk of a worldwide recession.

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said she did not expect a recession for major economies but could not rule one out.

While Shanghai, China’s commercial hub, aims to normalise life from June 1 as its coronavirus caseloads decline, an increase in new COVID-19 cases in Beijing has raised concerns for further curbs.

“China’s COVID lockdowns are certainly playing a substantial role that weighs on fuel and energy demand outlook, with Beijing reporting rising positive cases, making investors concerned about expanding lockdowns into another business hub apart from Shanghai,” said Tina Teng, an analyst at CMC Markets.

Losses were limited by expectations that gasoline demand would remain high amid tight supplies.

The United States is set to enter its peak driving season beginning on Memorial Day weekend at the end of this week.

An embargo on Russian oil imports will likely be agreed on by the European Union “within days,” according to its biggest member Germany, as Moscow said it saw its economic ties growing with China after being isolated by the West over its invasion of Ukraine.

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