Oil rockets higher, boosting global equities

Business & Finance
23 Apr 2020 • 7:29 AM MYT
Malay Mail
Malay Mail

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The price surge yesterday came after US President Donald Trump threatened to shoot at Iranian boats in a key waterway for crude shipments after Washington accused its arch-foe of harassing its ships in the Gulf. — Reuters pic

NEW YORK, April 23 — Beaten-down US oil prices rallied yesterday following dramatic declines earlier this week, lifting global equities, even as American crude inventories surged closer to capacity levels.

Futures for the benchmark West Texas Intermediate for June delivery jumped 19 per cent to US$13.78 (RM60.12) a barrel in New York. WTI sank into negative territory on Monday for the first time, but that was for the May contract that expired Tuesday.

The price surge yesterday came after US President Donald Trump threatened to shoot at Iranian boats in a key waterway for crude shipments after Washington accused its arch-foe of harassing its ships in the Gulf.

But oil market watchers also were fixated on a weekly US inventory report that showed another big jump in crude stockpiles, including at the Cushing, Oklahoma hub where analysts say there is little remain space for more oil.

“Prices will need to continue to be at very low levels to incentive shuttering of capacity to prevent overfills throughout the system,” said Bart Melek, an analyst at TD Securities. “I would not be surprised to see single digit futures prices on the prompts or even negative again.”

The petroleum industry has emerged as one of the most vulnerable sectors of the global economy as shutdowns to limit the spread of coronavirus have a devastating impact on demand for oil.

The commodity has been further weakened by a battle for market share that raged much of the spring between Saudi Arabia and Russia.

Some analysts think a historic agreement last week between the two producers and other leading exporters could improve the supply-demand balance in the latter half of 2020.

US-Iran tensions flare

Trump, meanwhile, took to Twitter yesterday to say he had “instructed the United States Navy to shoot down and destroy any and all Iranian gunboats if they harass our ships at sea.”

The order came one week after 11 small armed Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps speedboats swarmed around six US Navy and Coast Guard ships in international waters in the northern Gulf.

Iran’s military spokesman said Trump should concentrate on “saving” his own country from the “major crisis” caused by coronavirus, instead of making threats.

“Today, instead of intimidating others, the Americans would do better to save their troops infected by the coronavirus,” Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekarchi, spokesman for Iran’s armed forces, said yesterday.

The Gulf is a major gateway for oil to reach international markets, and previous spikes in tensions between US and Iranian vessels have seen crude prices similarly surge higher. But geopolitical tensions won’t have a lasting impact if crude storage facilities are full.

The oil rally helped boost equities in Europe and the US, where major indices finished up two per cent or more.

“The monster rebound in the oil market has boosted sentiment in stocks, and in turn the major equity benchmarks are set to finish the day deep into positive territory,” said market analyst David Madden at CMC Markets UK.

Still, analysts described broad investor unease due to uncertainty on when the US economy will reopen following coronavirus lockdowns and on how quickly activity will return.

“We all can assume that by the end of June, the country will be pretty much open again, but we don’t know,” said Maris Ogg of Tower Bridge Advisors.

“The clear problem is confidence,” she said. “Everything has to do with people being fearful of congregating.”

Key figures around 2030 GMT

West Texas Intermediate: UP 19 per cent at US$13.87 per barrel

Brent North Sea crude: UP 5.4 per cent at US$20.37 per barrel

New York — Dow: UP 2.0 per cent at 23,475.82 (close)

New York — S&P 500: UP 2.3 per cent at 2,799.31 (close)

New York — Nasdaq: UP 2.8 per cent at 8,495.38 (close)

London — FTSE 100: UP 2.3 per cent at 5,770.63 (close)

Frankfurt — DAX 30: UP 1.6 per cent at 10,415.03 (close)

Paris — CAC 40: UP 1.2 per cent at 4,411.80 (close)

EURO STOXX 50: UP 1.6 per cent at 2,834.90 (close)

Tokyo — Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.7 per cent at 19,137.95 (close)

Hong Kong — Hang Seng: UP 0.4 per cent at 23,893.36 (close)

Shanghai — Composite: UP 0.6 per cent at 2,843.98 (close)

Euro/dollar: DOWN at US$1.0822 from US$1.0858 at 2100 GMT

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 107.71 from 107.80 yen

Pound/dollar: UP at US$1.2320 from US$1.2289

Euro/pound: DOWN at 87.82 pence from 88.36 pence — AFP