U.S. crude oil falls nearly 3%, trades below $68 on report Saudi committed to production increase

Environment

U.S. crude oil prices fell nearly 3% on Thursday on a report that Saudi Arabia is committed to pressing ahead with production increases later this year.

Saudi is prepared to ditch its unofficial oil price target of $100 per barrel, people familiar with the kingdom’s thinking told The Financial Times. Saudi officials are ready to increase oil production in December even if the move results in a prolonged period of low oil prices, the people said.

Here are Thursday’s energy prices:

  • West Texas Intermediate November contract: $68.15 per barrel, down $1.54, or 2.21%. Year to date, U.S. crude oil is down about 5%.
  • Brent November contract: $71.86 per barrel, down $1.60, or 2.2%. Year to date, the global benchmark is down nearly 7%.
  • RBOB Gasoline October contract: $1.964 per gallon, down 1.7%. Year to date, gasoline is down about nearly 6%.
  • Natural Gas October contract: $2.628 per thousand cubic feet, up 0.3%. Year to date, gas is up more than 4%.

Prices are also under pressure on the expectation that oil production will rise in Libya. Factions in the North African country reached a deal Wednesday to appoint a new central bank governor. A political dispute over who should lead the bank has led to production disruptions.

The prospect of rising production is set against a backdrop of soft demand in China, the world’s largest crude importer and second-largest consumer. Oil prices rallied earlier in the week after Beijing announced a new stimulus package.

Articles You May Like

The PM wants to focus on global affairs – but the noisy protests back home will only get louder
Banana duct-taped to a wall sells for $6.2m at auction
Biden adding ‘fuel to fire’, Kremlin says – as Ukraine allowed to fire US missiles into Russia
One of our lagging stocks has found its stride and is outperforming its peers
Trump on day one will be ‘like nothing you’ve seen in history’, warns campaign official