Home Covid-19 Oil declines with demand outlook clouded by spreading delta Futures in New York traded below $72 a barrel after adding 0.4 per cent last week by Bloomberg July 26, 2021 Oil declined after eking out a modest weekly gain as investors assessed the outlook for demand amid a resurgence in Covid-19. Futures in New York traded below $72 a barrel after adding 0.4 per cent last week, the first weekly advance in three. There are signs that demand for fuels such as gasoline has increased as vaccination programmes are rolled out, although the fast-spreading delta variant has raised concerns about the short-term outlook. Tight restrictions have been renewed including curfews in some places. “The delta variant continues to hang over the demand recovery,” said Vandana Hari, founder of energy consultant Vanda Insights in Singapore. “It may take some time for the oil bulls to recover their confidence.” The latest virus flare-up has coincided with a salvaged OPEC+ agreement to add more barrels from August, whipping up stiff headwinds for oil and interrupting a price rally. Expectations are for a continued tightening of the market throughout the rest of 2021, however, leading to even higher prices. While the recovery in key energy consumers such as the US and China has helped to drain bloated crude and fuel stockpiles built up during the pandemic, the aviation sector is lagging. Air travel has jumped in North America, but that’s done little to diminish the massive glut in jet fuel inventories. Prices West Texas Intermediate for September fell 0.5 per cent to $71.69 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 12.05pm in Singapore after adding 0.2 per cent in the previous session. Brent for September settlement dropped 0.5 per cent to $73.74 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange after advancing 0.4 per cent on Friday. The prompt timespread for Brent was 68 cents a barrel in backwardation – a bullish market structure where near-dated prices are more expensive than later-dated ones. That compares with 88 cents at the beginning of July. Countries including Thailand and Vietnam are imposing curfews in cities to battle a surge in Covid-19 cases, while in Germany senior politicians have floated the possibility of tough restrictions for the unvaccinated. The top US infectious disease expert, Anthony Fauci, warned that the nation is moving in the “wrong direction” in combating the new wave of the pandemic. Tags oil 0 Comments You might also like Oil jumps over 2% amid further Red Sea vessel attacks Oil eased ahead of Christmas break on possible future Angola output increase OPEC+: GCC’s Saudi, UAE, Kuwait and Oman to cut oil outputs Global markets: Five countries to watch this week