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Oil Slumps After China Taps Crude Reserves to Ease Energy Costs

Oil was steady above $69 a barrel as the slow return of U.S. output halted by Hurricane Ida.

Oil Slumps After China Taps Crude Reserves to Ease Energy Costs
An employee holds a bottle of crude petroleum sample. (Photographer: Akio Kon/Bloomberg)

Oil fell by the most in nearly three weeks after China decided to tap its crude reserves to ease a surge in energy costs. 

Futures declined 1.7% in New York on Thursday, following the latest step by the world’s largest importer of raw materials to quell a commodities rally. Oil prices briefly rose earlier in the session after a U.S. government report showed crude stockpiles fell as production tumbled the most on record last week due to disruptions by Hurricane Ida.

“Additional supply coming from the Chinese SPR -- reducing the need to import more oil in the near term -- has weighed on prices,” said Giovanni Staunovo, a commodity analyst at UBS Group. 

Oil Slumps After China Taps Crude Reserves to Ease Energy Costs

In recent days, U.S. benchmark crude has fluctuated near $69 a barrel, with investors weighing the impact of domestic supply disruptions against uncertainty over demand as the pandemic continues to rage. 

China’s move to release oil from its strategic reserves, its most dramatic intervention yet in the oil market, primarily targets domestic refining and chemical firms. It follows similar action the government has already taken in several other commodities markets and adds pressure to oil prices. 

Oil Slumps After China Taps Crude Reserves to Ease Energy Costs

In a late statement on Thursday, the National Food and Strategic Reserves Administration said the country had tapped its giant oil reserves to “to ease the pressure of rising raw material prices.”

A sustained decline in prices demonstrates the market thinks China will keep using their strategic reserves to drive prices down, according to Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at Price Futures Group.

Prices
  • West Texas Intermediate for October delivery fell $1.16 to settle at $68.14 a barrel in New York.
  • Brent for November settlement dropped $1.15 to end the session at $71.45 a barrel.

As of Thursday, nearly three-fourths of U.S. Gulf of Mexico oil output was still offline after Hurricane Ida hit Louisiana, marking a slower comeback than in the wake of Katrina in 2005. The ripple effects in the market were apparent in the EIA report. Gasoline stockpiles fell by more than 7 million barrels last week, while crude production slid by 1.5 million barrels a day. Crude inventories dropped 1.53 million barrels. 

Physical markets have reacted to the Gulf of Mexico outages with a surge in the value of grades from U.S. Mars Blend to Russia’s Urals. Royal Dutch Shell Plc declared force majeure on “numerous contracts” following hurricane-related disruptions, the company said. One of those contracts included a 2-million-barrel cargo of Mars crude sold to China, according to people with knowledge of the matter. 

Other market news:
  • Some of the world’s biggest economies are seeing oil consumption turn the corner and even surpass pre-pandemic levels as falling Covid-19 infection rates drive a recovery in activity. Oil demand in China, the world’s top energy consumer, will be 13% higher next quarter than in the same period in 2019 before the pandemic, according to SIA Energy.
  • Saudi Arabia’s state-run energy firm is splitting its gas production division in two, as the fuel becomes increasingly important for expanding its chemicals business and amid efforts to position itself for the energy transition.

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