Oil prices slump as coronavirus deaths surge past 30,000

Police officers keeping watch as a Kuwaiti oil tanker unloads crude oil at the port in Qingdao, in China's eastern Shandong province. Oil prices slumped in Asian trade Monday, tracking falls on stock markets after a sharp escalation in the coronavirus crisis. PHOTO | STR | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The falls came after the death toll from the pandemic surged past 30,000 at the weekend.
  • US President Donald Trump extended "social distancing" guidelines until April 30.
  • Stephen Innes, chief global market strategist at AxiCorp, said prices had now "softened".

Singapore

Oil prices slumped in Asian trade Monday, tracking falls on stock markets after a sharp escalation in the coronavirus crisis over the weekend.

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate fell 3.9 per cent to trade at $20 a barrel, while international benchmark Brent crude was off 4.9 per cent at $23 a barrel.

The falls came after the death toll from the pandemic surged past 30,000 at the weekend as cases in hard-hit Europe and the United States rocketed.

Senior US scientist Anthony Fauci estimated the virus could possibly result in 100,000 to 200,000 deaths in the United States, while President Donald Trump extended "social distancing" guidelines until April 30.

The virus has infected more than 140,000 in the world's top economy and left more than 2,400 dead.

LOCKDOWNS

Oil markets have been plunging for weeks as lockdowns and travel restrictions imposed by governments worldwide to fight the virus sapped demand.

Top producers Saudi Arabia and Russia are also locked in a price war, contributing to massive oversupply that is pushing down prices.

Along with global stocks, prices had clawed back some ground last week as policy makers worldwide unleashed massive stimulus measures to prop up the virus-hit global economy.

But Stephen Innes, chief global market strategist at AxiCorp, said prices had now "softened".

This suggested "the direction of travel skews lower as markets anticipate a (second quarter) that will inevitably see a large build in inventories, as demand echoes the shutting down of major global economies", he added.