Tuesday , April 23 2024
Home / Blockchain / Oil Price Drops Below $30 as Coronavirus Forces Reduced Demand

Oil Price Drops Below $30 as Coronavirus Forces Reduced Demand

Summary:
The situation with the oil price is getting worse as the price has now fallen below as there is no longer much demand because of travel restrictions due to the coronavirus.The price of oil is easily the most talked about the news after the coronavirus pandemic. Oil, which has relatively maintained a significantly healthy price range for a while now, crashed terribly last week. Saudi Arabia deliberately cut down on the price of oil by 30% in response to Russia disagreeing to reduce its production volume. Since then, the oil market has been hanging in the balance with fears that things might get worse. Those fears have now come to fruition as the price of oil has crashed lower again.Oil Price Crashes Below The oil price has now plunged by more than 8%, worrying investors as its

Topics:
Tolu Ajiboye considers the following as important: , , , , , , , , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Chimamanda U. Martha writes Man City and OKX Roll Out Limited Edition NFT Collection for Football Lovers 

Bena Ilyas writes Bitget Report: Middle East Crypto Market Surges by 166% YoY

Godfrey Benjamin writes Celo Developer cLabs Proposes Ethereum Layer 2 Chain Development Using OP Stack

Steve Muchoki writes Binance Exec, Who Fled Nigeria, Denies Report of Extradition from Kenya

The situation with the oil price is getting worse as the price has now fallen below $30 as there is no longer much demand because of travel restrictions due to the coronavirus.

The price of oil is easily the most talked about the news after the coronavirus pandemic. Oil, which has relatively maintained a significantly healthy price range for a while now, crashed terribly last week. Saudi Arabia deliberately cut down on the price of oil by 30% in response to Russia disagreeing to reduce its production volume. Since then, the oil market has been hanging in the balance with fears that things might get worse. Those fears have now come to fruition as the price of oil has crashed lower again.

Oil Price Crashes Below $30

The oil price has now plunged by more than 8%, worrying investors as its forecast is now quite bearish. The plunge has renewed fears of a global recession amid the current problem with the coronavirus. Specifically, the U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude lost 8.6%, pushing the price down to $28.99 per barrel. The international Brent crude benchmark crash is worse at 10.9%, leaving a barrel at $30.13. This is the first time Brent is dropping this low, in the last four years.

The Trump administration is, however, scuttling to keep things as balanced as possible. Speaking to reporters at the White House on Friday, President Donald Trump said:

“Based on the prices of oil, I’ve instructed the Secretary of Energy to purchase, at a very good price, large quantities of crude oil for storage in the U.S. strategic reserve. We’re going to fill it right up to the top.”

Price Could Slide Further

Apart from the oil war started by Saudi Arabia, oil is facing another serious adversary. Amid the coronavirus, oil demand has plunged quite terribly. Several restrictions all over the world have directly impacted the number of travelers usually up and about. Several airlines are already shutting down as they are seeing less traffic. Oil is just not in as much demand as it normally is.

According to the head of oil markets at Rystad Energy Bjoernar Tonhaugen, the worst is yet to come.

“Oil prices have reacted extremely negatively and we believe…that we have not seen the bottom of the oil price just yet. The potential loss of demand in March-April may dwarf anything the world has ever seen, just when OPEC+ producers open the floodgates of new supply to the market.”

Even as the Trump administration tries to salvage the situation, not everyone is bullish. Trump says that buying large quantities will not only save taxpayers billions of dollars but also help the country’s oil industry achieve “energy independence.” American multinational financial services company Goldman Sachs says that the U.S.’ decision to buy oil in large quantities will not do much for the price of oil. The firm says it will be “insufficient to reverse the increasingly likely risk that prices” still plunge.

Business, Commodities & Futures, Markets, News
Tolu Ajiboye
Author: Tolu Ajiboye

Tolu is a cryptocurrency and blockchain enthusiast based in Lagos. He likes to demystify crypto stories to the bare basics so that anyone anywhere can understand without too much background knowledge. When he's not neck-deep in crypto stories, Tolu enjoys music, loves to sing and is an avid movie lover.

Share this article

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *