Oil prices steady as Middle Eastern supply concerns ease

Date:

By Laila Kearney

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Oil prices were little changed on Monday as concern eased that fighting in the Middle East would disrupt supply and Chinese data suggested weak demand, while an increase in U.S. refining limited any selling.

Brent futures for May delivery settled at $82.21 a barrel, gaining 13 cents. The U.S. crude April contract slipped 8 cents to end at $77.93 a barrel.

“I guess it’s: the barrel half empty or the barrel half full, depending on how you look at it,” said Phil Flynn, pointing to conflicting forces keeping oil prices from moving far in either direction.

Both benchmarks ended last week lower after bearish Chinese data implied weaker demand in the world’s leading crude importer. Brent closed down 1.8%, although the contract has remained above $80 a barrel for over a month. WTI ended 2.5% lower.

China’s crude oil imports rose in the first two months of the year compared with the same period of 2023, but…

Read more…

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Tampa RV giant Lazydays to delist from Nasdaq

Tampa-based Lazydays Holdings Inc., one of Florida’s most recognized...

Granite Geek: New Hampshire might get access to ‘balcony solar’

I had solar panels put on my roof six...

TSX Today: What to Watch for in Stocks on Monday, November 10

Despite firm gold and silver prices, Canadian stocks...

While BNB and DOT Struggle Under Market Pressure, BlockDAG’s Presale Soars Past $435M!

As market-wide fear grips the sector, the Binance Coin...