US Crude Oil Futures Drop Below $60 per Barrel to Lowest Level in 4 Years
Oil drilling activity in the United States could be negatively affected by deflated prices.
WTI crude oil futures, a benchmark for U.S. light oil, dropped to $58.95 per barrel in early Monday trading, the lowest level since mid-April 2021, as fears of a recession and expectations of increased supply continued to put downward pressure on prices.
Brent crude oil futures fell to a low of $62.51 per barrel, their lowest level in roughly four years. WTI was trading 2.61 percent lower for the day, as of 8:15 a.m. EDT, while Brent futures were down 2.47 percent.
Since the April 2 closing, both WTI and Brent crude oil prices have fallen by roughly 15 percent.
Trump justified tariffs as a crucial tool to deal with America’s trade deficit.
“Chronic trade deficits are no longer merely an economic problem,” he said earlier this month. “They’re a national emergency that threatens our security and our very way of life.”
Bessent also said he was not concerned with the negative reaction in the stock market, saying the market has always underestimated Trump.
Oil markets are also reacting to the announcement as OPEC+ recently said it would boost a planned May increase in output by a higher-than-expected amount. The imminent addition of excess supply puts downward pressure on oil prices.
The weak WTI oil prices are also likely to result in a “severe slowdown” in oil drilling activity in the United States, ING said.
While the oil rig count increased by five sites over the past week, the bank expects the trend to “quickly reverse” given the current WTI prices.
“The latest Dallas Fed Energy Survey shows that US producers need, on average, $65/bbl to profitably drill a new well, compared to a spot WTI price of a little over $60/bbl, while forward prices are sub-$60/bbl,” the bank said. “A reversal in drilling in the US would mean it doesn’t take long to start seeing US oil production declining.”