Oil dips amid rout in stocks, bonds; dollar gains

Reuters  |  HOUSTON 

By Bryan Sims

(Reuters) - Oil fell for a third day on Tuesday as the U. S. dollar rose to its highest in more than a week in the wake of a sharp sell-off on Wall Street and other stock markets, a global rout that wiped out $4 trillion in value.

The crude market remained in positive territory so far this year, even after Wall Street stocks on Monday posted their largest one-day fall since late 2011.

futures were down 60 cents at $67.02 a at 1:38 p.m. EST (1838 GMT). U. S. crude futures were 42 cents lower at $63.73.

Gasoline margins were at the lowest since mid-December, down more than 8 percent and headed for the biggest daily percentage decline since Jan 2.

The U. S. stock index, the has lost 8 percent since it hit a record high on Jan. 26. Oil has shed 4.9 percent.

U. S. stocks rebounded in volatile midday trading after starting the session 2 percent lower.

"It's been tough to get a read on crude with everything going on in the equities market today," said John Macaluso, at in

Oil's inverse relationship to the dollar, whereby a stronger currency makes it more expensive for non-U. S. investors to buy dollar-denominated assets, has reasserted itself this week, with the greenback up 1 percent since Feb. 1. [.

DXY]

One factor that has lent support to is the structure of the forward curve. The prompt futures contract is trading well above those for delivery further in the future.

"With the equities sell-off Friday and Monday crude has proved to be relatively resilient in the face of these headwinds," said John Saucer, vice president of research and analytics at in

have been supported by a 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) cut in supply by the Organization of the Exporting Countries and [EIA/S] [OPEC/O] [RIG/U]

Still, rising U. S. supply has pressured The said on Tuesday it expects domestic in 2018 to rise by 1.26 million barrels per day (bpd) to 10.59 million bpd this year. Last month, it expected a 970,000 bpd year-over-year increase to 10.27 million bpd.

A preliminary poll by showed analysts expected weekly data to show that U. S. crude inventories last week rose for a second straight week. [EIA/S]

Industry group the American Institute will issue its data on stocks on at 4:30 p.m. EST, followed by official figures from the on Wednesday morning.

(Additional reporting by in London and Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by and David Gregorio)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, February 07 2018. 00:38 IST