Oil slumps 2% as Suez Canal container ship starts to move

Oil slumps 2% as Suez Canal container ship starts to move
Hundreds of other container ships, bulk carriers and oil-laden tankers remain backed up at both ends of the canal. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 29 March 2021
Follow

Oil slumps 2% as Suez Canal container ship starts to move

Oil slumps 2% as Suez Canal container ship starts to move
  • Brent oil was down $1.38, or 2.1 percent at $63.19 a barrel
  • Oil prices have swung wildly in the last few days as traders and investors tried to weigh the impact of the blockage of a key trade transit point

TOKYO: Oil slumped more than 2 percent on Monday after news from the Suez Canal that salvage crews have managed to move the giant container ship that has been clogging up the vital global trade passage for nearly a week.
Brent oil was down $1.38, or 2.1 percent at $63.19 a barrel by 0511 GMT. US crude fell 1.48 cents, or 2.4 percent, to $59.49 a barrel.
The stranded container ship Ever Given has almost been completely floated and will be inspected before it is moved, a shipping source with knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Monday.
Hundreds of other container ships, bulk carriers and oil-laden tankers remain backed up at both ends of the canal, but news of the ship’s movement immediately sent oil prices sharply lower after they had traded slightly down for the morning.
Oil prices have swung wildly in the last few days as traders and investors tried to weigh the impact of the blockage of a key trade transit point and the broader effect of lockdowns to stop coronavirus infections.
That market volatility is set to continue, said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at OANDA.
“Given the volatility last week, Brent looks set to move to the lower end of its $60.00 to $65.00 a barrel range,” he said, while US oil is “likely to drop to the lower side of its $57.50 to $62.50 a barrel weekly range.”
Prices are getting some support from expectations that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies will maintain lower output levels when they meet this week.