Latest News

Oil prices fall as fears about tariffs grow

The oil prices dropped for a second consecutive day on early Tuesday, amid fears that U.S. Tariffs on Canada Mexico and China will slow down economies in the world. This could also hurt energy demand as OPEC+ increases its supply.

Brent futures dropped 29 cents or 0.42% to $68.99 a bar at 0016 GMT. U.S. West Texas intermediate crude futures declined 36 cents or 0.55% to $65.67 a bar.

Donald Trump's protectionist policy has roiled global markets. Trump has imposed and then delayed tariffs on the biggest oil suppliers of his country, Canada and Mexico. He also raised duties on Chinese products. China and Canada responded with their own tariffs.

Trump has said that a "period" of transition is likely for the U.S. economy, but he declined to say whether it could be a recession due to stock market worries about his tariffs.

Daniel Hynes is a senior commodity strategist with ANZ. He said that Trump's remarks triggered a selling wave as investors began pricing in the risk of weakened growth in demand.

All three major U.S. indices suffered sharp drops on Monday. The S&P 500 experienced its largest one-day decline since December 18, and the Nasdaq dropped 4.0%, which was its biggest percentage drop in a single day since September 2022.

Howard Lutnick, the U.S. Secretary of Commerce, said that Trump will not ease off on his tariffs against Mexico Canada and China.

Alexander Novak, the Russian Deputy Premier, said that the OPEC+ Group had agreed to increase oil production starting in April. However, the group could change its mind if market imbalances were found.

A preliminary poll on Monday showed that crude oil stocks in the U.S. were likely to have increased last week while gasoline and distillate inventories are expected to be down.

The poll was conducted in advance of reports due from the American Petroleum Institute at 4:30 pm EDT (2030 GMT), and the Energy Information Administration (the statistical arm of U.S. Department of Energy) at 10:30 am EDT (1430 GMT), on Wednesday. (Reporting and editing by Jacqueline Wong in New York)

(source: Reuters)