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Oil down by over 6% as new strain of COVID-19 virus causes panic selling

Oil Falls by Over $4 in 2 Days

The black liquid declined by over 5% today, hitting a two-month low as investors reacted to the new COVID-19 variant, adding to concerns that a supply surplus could hit the market.

Oil fell with global equities markets on fears the variant could dampen economic growth and fuel demand. Governments have started to enact restrictions as Britain and other European states have restricted travel from Southern Africa, where the variant was detected.

The global benchmark, the Brent crude is down 6.03%, currently trading at $77.26 a barrel while the U.S. benchmark, the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude is down 6.88%, currently trading $73 a barrel. Both benchmarks are heading for their fifth week of losses.

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PVM analyst Tamas Varga stated, “OPEC’s initial assessment of the co-ordinated (stockpile) release and the sudden appearance of a new variant of the coronavirus raises serious concerns about economic growth and the oil balance in coming months.”

Iranian production was also in focus, with indirect talks due to resume on Monday between Iran and the United States on reviving a 2015 nuclear deal that could lead to the lifting of U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil exports.

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Eurasia analyst, Henry Rome, explained that the failure of Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency to reach even a modest agreement on monitoring of Tehran’s nuclear facilities this week bodes poorly for next week’s talks.

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