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Oil Plummets, Erasing All 2022 Gains as Traders Flee Market

Oil rose for the first time in three days on optimism that China’s reopening will buoy demand.

A bridge across storage silos inside the Oiltanking Deutschland GmbH tank farm in Berlin, Germany, on Monday, Dec. 5, 2022. After months of planning and negotiations, the European Union and the UK have banned the import of seaborne Russian oil in a historic intervention in the global market. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg
A bridge across storage silos inside the Oiltanking Deutschland GmbH tank farm in Berlin, Germany, on Monday, Dec. 5, 2022. After months of planning and negotiations, the European Union and the UK have banned the import of seaborne Russian oil in a historic intervention in the global market. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg

Oil dropped to the lowest since last December as investors pared back crude positions amid a broader market sell-off.

West Texas Intermediate settled near $74 on Tuesday, erasing all of this year’s gains. The slump comes against a backdrop of ever-dwindling liquidity in the oil market: Brent open interest is at the lowest since 2015, as traders strip their positions in the final month of the year.

Traders are “fleeing the market” because of the “absurd” price actions oil has recently experienced, Ed Morse, global head of commodity research at Citigroup Inc., said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “We are getting toward the end of the year, and those who made money this year did not want to lose any.” 

Risk appetite remains low as investors digest economic data pointing to a slowdown in the US, and weigh the long-term impact of the latest round of restrictions placed on Russia by the European Union and Group of Seven. These include limits on insurance and a $60-a-barrel cap on Russian oil. 

The oil market’s structure has also been in freefall, with one gauge of US trading at its weakest level in two years, pointing to ample near-term supply.

Oil Plummets, Erasing All 2022 Gains as Traders Flee Market

Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, has lowered most oil prices for Asia, including for its flagship Arab Light grade, in a sign demand remains tepid. The move was largely in line with refiners’ and traders’ predictions, according to a Bloomberg survey. The price is now at its lowest level since March.

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