Oil prices are declining in trading on Tuesday after a strong rise in the previous session.
The cost of March futures on London’s ICE Futures Exchange for Brent is $79.16 a barrel by 7:08 a.m. (EET) on Tuesday, down $0.49 (0.62%) from the close of the previous session. At the close of trading on Monday those contracts grew by $1.08 (1.37%) to $79.65 a barrel.
The price of WTI futures for February crude oil at electronic trades of NYMEX fell by that time by $0.40 (0.54%) to $74.23 per barrel. By closing of previous trades the cost of these contracts grew by $0.86 (1.17%) to $74.63 per barrel.
Brent has fallen by 8.5% and WTI by 8.1% at the end of the previous week.
Pressure on the oil market was put by “hawkish” statements by representatives of the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed), Trading Economics wrote. Mary Daley, head of the Federal Reserve Bank (FRB) of San Francisco, said she thinks the U.S. central bank will have to raise the rate above 5% to fight inflation.
“I think a level above 5 percent is absolutely likely,” she told The Wall Street Journal.
Her counterpart at the Atlanta Fed, Rafael Bostic, also reiterated an earlier view that the rate would be raised to more than 5 percent. Currently, its range is 4.25-4.5%.
Investors are also cautious ahead of the Lunar New Year, fearing that increased travel by Chinese citizens could lead to an increase in the incidence of coronavirus worldwide, Trading Economics noted.