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Oil down 1% on weak China GDP data, resumption of Libya output


  • China Q2 GDP grows 6.3% y/y vs analysts’ forecast of 7.3%
  • China June crude throughput up from May
  • Two of three Libyan fields resume output during weekend
  • Russian oil exports from western ports to fall -sources

July 17 (Reuters) – Oil prices extended their decline into a second session on Monday after China’s second-quarter growth came in weaker than expected, fuelling concern about demand in the world’s No. 2 oil consumer, while Libya resumed production on the weekend.

Brent crude futures fell 91 cents, or 1.1%, to $78.96 a barrel by 0628 GMT, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was at $74.55 a barrel, down 87 cents, also down 1.1%.

China’s gross domestic product grew 6.3% year on year in the second quarter, data released by the National Bureau of Statistics showed, compared with analysts’ forecast for growth of 7.3%, with its post-pandemic recovery faltering rapidly due to weakening demand at home and abroad.

“The GDP came in below expectations, so will do little to ease concerns over the Chinese economy,” said Warren Patterson, ING’s head of commodities research.

Chinese refineries processed 1.6% more crude daily in June than May as they ramped up operations after spring maintenance, NBS data also showed, in line with strong imports by the world’s top crude importer last month.

“Apparent oil demand grew at a strong pace year on year, but the market seems focused on the headline (GDP) numbers,” Patterson said.

Beijing is likely to be cautious in timing any new stimulus measures, wary of driving commodities prices higher, said Stefano Grasso, a senior portfolio manager at 8VantEdge in Singapore.

“They are stockpiling crude at low prices, and waiting for recession to hit the West before going full on with stimulus,” Grasso said.

Prices softened after both benchmarks last week notched a third straight week of gains and touched their highest since April, after output was shut at oilfields in Libya and Shell halted exports of a Nigerian crude, tightening supply.

Two of the three Libyan oilfields that were shut on Thursday, the Sharara and El Feel with a total production capacity of 370,000 barrels per day (bpd), resumed on Saturday evening, four oil engineers and oil ministry said.

The 108 field remained shut. Output was halted in protest against the abduction of a former finance minister.

In Russia, oil exports from western ports are set to fall by some 100,000-200,000 bpd next month from July, a sign Moscow is making good on a pledge for fresh supply cuts in tandem with OPEC leader Saudi Arabia, two sources said on Friday.

“Crude was in overbought territory at 12-week highs. The prop from the financial markets, which were cheering renewed expectations of a ‘soft landing’ for the U.S. economy, was temporary,” said Vandana Hari, founder of oil market analysis provider Vanda Insights.

The pullback has begun and will likely extend further as attention returns to economic worries, Hari added.

Reporting by Florence Tan and Mohi Narayan; Editing by Tom Hogue and Sonali Paul

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Reports on everything from how Asia’s fuel use recovers from the fallout of COVID-19 to tracking how the global energy transition impacts refinery expansion plans and fuel supplies in the coming decades. Mohi analyzes data to produce insights into an array of topics spanning refinery operations and profitability through to global oil trade flows…



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