European Oil Stocks Drop Most On Record After Crude Plunge

European Oil Stocks Drop the Most On Record After Crude Plunge

(Bloomberg) --

European oil stocks tumbled the most on record, wiping about $95 billion in off the gauge in one day, after the breakdown of OPEC+ talks on supply cuts triggered an all-out price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia.

The Stoxx 600 Oil & Gas index fell 17% to the lowest level since 1997, dragged down by declines of at least 15% for heavyweights including Total SA, BP Plc and Royal Dutch Shell Plc. All 22 stocks on the index traded lower, with Poland’s biggest refiner PKN Orlen SA outperforming after the company on Friday reassured investors about its dividend policy.

Oil futures fell more 30% in New York and London on Monday, the biggest drop since the Gulf War in 1991, before pulling back to around a 20% decline. Goldman Sachs Inc. warned that Brent prices could dip into the $20s range, a view echoed by Citigroup Inc.

“With too many unknowns around global economic growth, oil demand growth, the shape of the shale curve, and now OPEC/Russia supply intentions we are in unchartered waters at least for the short term,” Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint wrote in a note. The broker downgraded the European integrated oil sector and cut Shell, Total, Eni SpA, Equinor ASA and Repsol SA to market perform. “Fundamentals are unlikely to win out short term.”

Equity indexes in Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Qatar and Kuwait slumped for a second day, while Saudi Aramco extended losses in the past two sessions to more than 15%. U.S. oil majors and oil services and equipment stocks also slumped.

“The implications for oil look dire,” UBS AG analyst Jon Rigby said. “There are no winners, only the less badly hurt.”

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