May 09, 2022
NEW YORK: Oil prices sank 4% on Monday alongside equities, as continued coronavirus lockdowns in China, the top oil importer, sparked demand concerns.
Brent crude fell $4.47, or 4%, to $107.92 a barrel at 11:14 pm EDT (1514 GMT). US West Texas Intermediate crude fell, or 4.3%, $4.67 to $105.10 a barrel. Both contracts have gained over 35% so far this year.
Global financial markets have been spooked by concerns over interest rate hikes and recession worries as tighter and wider COVID-19 lockdowns in China led to slower export growth in the world's No 2 economy in April.
"The COVID lockdowns in China are negatively impacting the oil market, which is selling off in conjunction with equities," said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associated in Houston.
Crude imports by China in the first four months of 2022 fell 4.8% from a year ago, but April imports were up nearly 7%.
China's Iranian oil imports in April came off-peak volumes seen in late 2021 and early 2022 as demand from independent refiners weakened after COVID-19 lockdowns pummelled fuel margins and on growing imports of lower-priced Russian oil.
Wall Street stock indexes fell and the dollar hit a two-decade high, making oil more expensive for holders of other currencies.
Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter, lowered crude prices for Asia and Europe in June.
In Russia, oil output rose in early May from April and production stabilised, Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak was cited as saying after output fell in April as Western countries imposed sanctions over the Ukraine crisis.
Last week, the European Commission proposed a phased embargo on Russian oil, boosting Brent and WTI prices for the second straight week. The proposal needs a unanimous vote by EU members this week to pass.
The European Commission is considering offering landlocked Eastern European Union states more money to upgrade oil infrastructure in a bid to convince them to agree, an EU source told Reuters.
Japan, the top five crude importers, will ban Russian crude imports "in principle", Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said, adding this would take time.