Oil prices suffer worst monthly decline since March

The U.S oil-based contract, the major indicator used for U.S. crude prices, sold at 35.79 per barrel.

Crude oil traders are presently under immense pressure, as they log in their worst monthly loss since March.

The plunge in oil prices is coming on fresh restrictions placed on human mobility around Western Europe, in order to limit the spread of COVID-19. Thereby, strengthening concerns that demand would soften.

What we know: The U.S oil-based contract, popularly known as the West Texas Intermediate – the major indicator used for U.S. crude prices, sold at 35.79 per barrel.

  • For the month, the oil contract recorded a drop of 11%, the sharpest decline since March.
  • London-traded oil contract, Brent crude, settled at $37.94 per barrel. Brent registered a monthly loss of 7.4% for October.

What they are saying

Stephen Innes, Chief Global Market Strategist at Axi, spoke on the geopolitical macros distorting oil prices.

“Fresh worries that politicians worldwide will be pressured to lock down Christmas this year is hitting the oil markets like a ton of bricks.

“We are in the thick of the Covid-19 haze now. Winter is coming to the northern hemisphere, where crowding and social- behavioral patterns could be a frightening source of a seasonality bounce in the COVID-19 curve.

“Indeed, the alarmingly high level of angst in the markets makes it easy for the oil roller coaster to crest rally peaks and head downhill at alarmingly quick speeds.”

Bottomline

Oil traders might continue to see oil prices plummeting going forward. As a distortion in energy demand/supply rebalancing takes into effect amid new restrictions seen in the Northern Hemisphere, market sentiments will be significantly affected.

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