Oil prices began to decline on Thursday, falling for the fourth consecutive session on signals of expanding quarantine restrictions in China.
January futures for Brent on the London ICE Futures exchange by 14:01 Moscow time fell by $0.80 (0.86%) to $91.85 per barrel. Brent quotes fell below $92 per barrel for the first time since the end of October.
Quotes for December futures for WTI in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) by that time fell by $0.99 (1.15%) to $84.84 per barrel.
The day before, the price of Brent fell by 2.8%, WTI fell by 3.5%.
China introduces quarantine measures in a number of major cities, including Beijing, amid a jump in the incidence of COVID-19 in the country to the highest level in six months, Bloomberg reports. In particular, the restrictions affected the city of Chongqing with a population of more than 32 million people, which faced the sharpest increase in infections in more than a year.
China is the world’s largest importer of fuel, and market participants fear that lockdowns will put additional pressure on the economy and energy demand in the country, Barron’s notes.
In addition, on Wednesday it became known that US commercial oil inventories increased by 3.92 million barrels last week to 440.76 million barrels. This is a record figure since July 2021. Experts polled by Bloomberg expected an average increase in stocks of only 250 thousand barrels.
Traders are also waiting for the report on October inflation in the US, which will be released on Thursday and may affect the policy of the Federal Reserve. Analysts surveyed by Trading Economics expect a slowdown in inflation last month to 8% from September’s 8.2%.