LONDON (AFP) – Crude oil prices
eased on Tuesday, extending a recent move downward as a weak demand outlook
amid poor US company results offset
tight supply worries, traders said.
Brent North Sea crude for
delivery in December fell 23 cents to $109.21 a barrel in London midday deals.
New York’s main contract, light
sweet crude for December, slipped 30 cents to $88.35 a barrel.
“Crude oil prices have been
under pressure, tracking losses of the equity markets as fairly poor corporate
earnings results weighed on market sentiment,” said Sucden Financial analyst
Jack Pollard.
Crude markets were weighed
by worries over the US economy, with traders
“bracing themselves for a continuation of last week’s slew of weak earnings
from the likes of Google, McDonald’s and IBM,” IG trading group said in a note
to clients.
“There is still a bearish
mood over the corporate earnings season with so many misses among blue-chip US stocks,” it added.
Caterpillar, the world’s
biggest maker of construction and mining equipment, cut its sales outlook on
Monday.
The company, considered a
bellwether of the global economy, reduced its profit and sales forecast for
full-year 2012, suggesting a sharp slowdown in the fourth quarter.
Oil prices had fallen on
Monday in the wake of sharp pre-weekend losses, also as investors balanced poor
Japanese export data against Middle East unrest.
Japan on Monday posted its worst
September trade figures in more than 30 years.
The country has been
struggling to turn around its fortunes following the March 2011 earthquake and
tsunami disaster, while also suffering from Europe’s debt crisis, slowing
Chinese demand and the strong yen.
All eyes were also on
violence in the oil-rich Middle East region, as hopes of a truce
in war-torn Syria during this week’s Muslim
Eid al-Adha holiday remained slim on Tuesday as clashes showed no signs of
easing and the death toll mounted.
Elsewhere, Anglo-Dutch oil
group Shell on Tuesday said it may not meet contractual obligations on certain exports
from Nigeria because of theft and damage
to key pipelines in the country’s oil region.
No comments:
Post a Comment