Oil drops to record low as China’s ‘Black Monday’ grips the market

Published August 24th, 2015 - 02:45 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

Crude oil prices have been in a steep decline since June 2014, when prices hovered consistently about the $100 per barrel mark. Crude oil prices mirrored the plunge on the Shanghai, dropping to levels not seen at least since 2009.

Brent crude oil prices dropped more than 4 percent below the previous session to $43.47 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate passed another psychological threshold to start the trading day Monday down around 4.3 percent to $38.65 per barrel.

China's official Xinhua News Agency reports the decline in the Shanghai nearly wiped out gains for the year. That comes despite efforts by the Chinese government to reverse momentum with cash injections into the market and a devaluation of the national currency.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in the past had said it needs to keep production steady to satisfy expected demand from Asian economies.

Wall Street opened in negative territory, with the Dow off about 4.5 percent at the opening of trading Monday. Global market trends suggest crude oil prices are reacting more to direct macroeconomic swings than the specific supply and demand dynamics pushing trajectory for most of the year.

Low crude oil prices have forced energy companies to spend less on exploration and production. Despite low rig numbers, production remains resilient, particularly in U.S. shale basin.

German financial services company Commerzbank said last week, however, that "U.S. shale oil production is barely profitable any more at current prices."

Subscribe

Sign up to our newsletter for exclusive updates and enhanced content