Business

Oil continues plunge as US crude appears poised for low US$70s

WTI, Brent off some 40% from their March peaks

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 27 Sep 2022 1:09PM

Oil continues plunge as US crude appears poised for low US$70s
New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, which serves as the US crude benchmark, settled at US$76.71 a barrel yesterday, down US$2.03, or 2.6%, on the day. – Pixabay pic, September 27, 2022

NEW YORK – The tumble in oil prices showed no sign of receding as sellers in control of the market pushed hard on their bid to get a barrel of US crude to the low US$70s, reported Sputnik.

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate, or WTI, which serves as the US crude benchmark, settled at US$76.71 a barrel yesterday, down US$2.03, or 2.6%, on the day. WTI has fallen 40% since hitting 14-year highs of around US$130 on March 7, a fortnight after the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war.

“The catalyst might be economic fundamentals but there’s certainly a target to it, and that target is absolutely technical,” said Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at SKCharting.com. “For now, it’s US$72 WTI and, if that breaks, it will be US$63.”

With September trading due to end on Friday, WTI is also down 14% so far on the month. Aside from that, it is headed for its first losing quarter since 2020, with a decline of 27% as of yesterday for the July-through-September period.

Brent, the London-traded global benchmark for oil, settled at US$84.06, down US$2.09, or 2.4%, on the day. Like WTI, Brent is also some 40% off from its March peak of nearly US$140. For the month, Brent is down 13%, while for the third quarter, it was 28% lower.

Investors are fleeing from risk across markets as global central banks, led by the US Federal Reserve, embark on the most aggressive rate hikes in 40 years to fight inflation.

The Fed has raised rates by 300 points this year and plans to add another 125 by December, after starting from just 25 points in February.

The central bank’s actions have sent the dollar rallying to 20-year highs. A stronger dollar is typically bad for commodities priced in dollars, such as crude, as it makes them costlier for anyone using the euro and other currencies. – Bernama, September 27, 2022

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