Oil prices are falling on Tuesday after rising the day before. The pressure on the market is exerted by continuing fears of a decrease in demand due to strict quarantine restrictions in China. The European Union, meanwhile, is preparing a plan to reduce energy consumption in the face of falling gas supplies from Russia.
“We do not think that we can expect a sustainable rally in the market in the near future,” Morgan Stanley’s expert review, quoted by Bloomberg, says. is already reflected in market statistics, and China is a particularly important contributor.”
The cost of November futures for Brent crude on the London ICE Futures exchange by 8:10 am CST on Tuesday is $93.7 per barrel, which is $0.3 (0.32%) lower than the closing price of the previous session. As a result of trading on Monday, these contracts rose by $1.16 (1.3%) to $94 per barrel.
The price of futures for WTI oil for October in the electronic trading of the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) is $87.58 per barrel by this time, which is $0.20 (0.23%) lower than the final value of the previous session. By the close of the market the day before, the value of these contracts increased by $0.99 (1.1%) to $87.78 per barrel.
The US reaffirmed on Monday that it does not see the possibility of reaching an agreement on the restoration of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action soon.
US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that he considers the restoration of the JCPOA in the near future unlikely due to Tehran’s position. Last Saturday, Germany, France and the UK expressed “serious doubts” about Iran’s sincerity in seeking to renew the JCPOA and warned that the country’s stance jeopardized the prospects for a deal.