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Oil prices drop amid concern about tariff war

February 06, 2025 00:00:00


Oil prices dropped over 1 per cent on Wednesday as rising US stockpiles and concern about a new Sino-US trade war fuelled fears of weaker economic growth, offseting US President Donald Trump's renewed push to eliminate Iranian crude exports, reports Reuters.

Brent crude futures were down 92 cents, or 1.21 per cent, at $75.28 a barrel at 1210 GMT. US West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) was down 86 cents, or 1.18 per cent, to $71.84.

Oil on Tuesday traded in a wide range, with WTI falling at one point by 3 per cent to its lowest since Dec. 31 after China announced tariffs on US imports of oil, liquefied natural gas and coal in retaliation for US levies on Chinese exports.

Prices rebounded, however, after Trump restored the "maximum pressure" campaign on Iran to curtail its nuclear programme he enacted in his first term, which cut Iranian crude exports close to zero.

Ongoing trade tensions between the US and China may dampen demand for oil, putting downward pressure on prices.

"Trump tariff chaos and trade war is no good for global growth and oil demand growth. Business investments and consumer spending will likely fall in the face of these highly erratic and growth-negative actions," said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst at SEB.

"The oil market is now caught between increasing fears that an escalating trade war will damage global oil demand growth on the one hand and possible sudden disruption of Iranian oil export," he added.

Iran's oil minister said imposing unilateral sanctions on crude producers would destabilise energy markets, the ministry's SHANA news outlet reported.

Tehran's oil exports brought in $53 billion in 2023 and $54 billion a year earlier, according to US Energy Information Administration estimates. Output during 2024 was running at its highest level since 2018, based on OPEC data.


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