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HomeTrade and IndustryOil prices steady as storms close in on Gulf of Mexico

Oil prices steady as storms close in on Gulf of Mexico

By Reuters 

Crude oil prices remained steady, on Monday, as storms closed in on the Gulf of Mexico, shutting more than half the region’s oil production. 

Although, prices were capped by ongoing concerns about fuel demand being sapped by coronavirus lockdowns. 

Brent futures slipped two cents, or 0.1 per cent to $44.33 a barrel by 0316 GMT while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was down two cents, or 0.1 per cent to $42.32 a barrel. 

Both benchmark contracts had risen early on Monday. 

On Sunday, Hurricane Marco and Tropical Storm Laura tore through the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, forcing energy companies to pull workers from offshore platforms and shut down oil output. 

Producers had shut 58 per cent of the Gulf’s offshore oil output and 45 per cent of natural gas supply on Sunday. 

The region accounts for 17 per cent of total U.S. oil production and five per cent of the U.S. natural gas output. 

“Crude prices rose as double trouble in the Atlantic could lead to huge disruptions with oil operations in the Gulf of Mexico,’’ said Edward Moya, Senior Market Analyst at OANDA in New York. 

“Oil’s gains, however, are likely to be muted as virus uncertainty continues to weigh on the crude demand outlook.’’ 

The global death toll from the coronavirus surpassed 800,000 on Saturday, according to a Reuters’ tally, with the U.S., Brazil and India leading the rise in fatalities. 

Also capping the potential for price rises, the U.S. oil and natural rig count increased this week for the first time since March, with energy firms adding the most oil rigs in seven months, as shale producers, start drilling again. 

Still, adding to support for prices was a report by members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other oil powers, including Russia, that countries in the OPEC+ group that pumped above supply targets from May to July will need to slash output by over a million barrels per day for two months to compensate.  

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