HomeNewsBusinessMarketsOil sinks below $100 as China’s lockdowns imperil demand outlook

Oil sinks below $100 as China’s lockdowns imperil demand outlook

West Texas Intermediate futures dropped more than 2% to trade below $100 a barrel after capping a weekly decline. Shanghai reported record daily deaths over the weekend, while authorities in Beijing warned the virus was silently spreading.

April 25, 2022 / 07:21 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Residents take part in a round of Covid-19 testing during a lockdown in Shanghai, China, on Sunday, April 24, 2022.  Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
Residents take part in a round of Covid-19 testing during a lockdown in Shanghai, China, on Sunday, April 24, 2022. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

Oil pushed lower at the start of the week on concerns that a spreading Covid-19 outbreak in China will weigh on global demand.

West Texas Intermediate futures dropped more than 2% to trade below $100 a barrel after capping a weekly decline. Shanghai reported record daily deaths over the weekend, while authorities in Beijing warned the virus was silently spreading. The world’s biggest crude importer is heading for the worst oil demand shock this month since the early days of the coronavirus.

Story continues below Advertisement

China’s travails with Covid-19 add another source of volatility to an oil market that’s been whipsawed by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The war has fanned inflation, and the European Union is discussing measures to restrict oil imports from Russia. That could tighten the market and drive prices higher.

China has implemented lockdowns in a number of cities as it pursues a Covid Zero strategy. Residents in a Beijing district were told to submit to three days of virus testing starting Monday in a bid to snuff out a rash of cases in the area. Shanghai is entering its fourth week of strict lockdown.