Oil settles below $90 as recession fears mount

Reuters

Published Sep 07, 2022 02:42

Updated Sep 07, 2022 20:56

By Laura Sanicola

(Reuters) -Oil prices settled sharply lower on Wednesday, slumping below levels seen prior to Russia's invasion of Ukraine as downbeat Chinese trade data fed investor worries about recession risks.

Brent crude futures settled down $4.83 to $88 a barrel, falling below $90 a barrel for the first since Feb. 8. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude settled down by $4.94, or 5.7%, to $81.94, its lowest since January.

"Right now the market is basing its concerns about what will happen due to sharply higher energy prices in Europe, slowing demand in Europe, and interest rates rising," said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Price Futures Group.

Several world central banks are slated to keep hiking rates to fight inflation, but economists have said the United States appears better placed to weather the storms. That has boosted the dollar to a 24-year peak against the yen and a 37-year high versus sterling. The stronger greenback pressures oil prices, since most worldwide oil sales are transacted in dollars.

The European Central Bank is expected to raise interest rates sharply when it meets on Thursday. A U.S. Federal Reserve meeting follows on Sept. 21.

The Bank of Canada hiked interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point to a 14-year high on Wednesday, as expected, and said the policy rate would need to go even higher as it battles raging inflation.

China's weak economic data and stringent zero-COVID policy added to demand concerns. Its crude oil imports in August fell 9.4% from a year earlier, customs data showed.

Prices drew some support from Russian President Vladimir Putin to halt the country's oil and gas exports if price caps are imposed.

The European Union proposed to cap Russian gas only hours later, raising the risk of rationing in some of the world's richest countries this winter. Russia's Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) has halted flows from the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, cutting off a substantial percentage of supply to Europe.