Oil Slides Toward 2003 Low on Demand Shock and Fading OPEC Hopes

Oil slid toward the lowest level since 2003 on plunging demand due to the economic fallout from the coronavirus crisis, and as prospects for a OPEC-Texas production deal faded.

Futures in London fell 4.3% on Monday as some traders estimate consumption will collapse by as much as 20 million barrels a day this year. While a powerful Texas oil regulatory official on Friday landed a rare invitation to attend OPEC’s June meeting, hopes for a pact began to unravel just hours later as his call to curb output was criticized by regulators and drillers.

U.S. crude futures fluctuated after earlier rising 4.5% following a second wave of initiatives by the Federal Reserve to support a shuttered American economy. A rally in other risk assets such as equities was also short-lived, soured by a failed effort by Congress to agree on a stimulus bill.

“The government is taking a ‘whatever it takes’ approach,” said Marshall Steeves, an analyst at IHS Markit. “That doesn’t change the fact that demand destruction is going to continue. There are still so many unknowns on the demand front. The duration of this economic shutdown is so uncertain that it’s making me believe the bottom may not be in yet.”

Policy makers around the world are taking measures to combat the virus. But the process could take additional time in the U.S. as the two political parties work out their differences. Democrats in the Senate blocked a Republican economic recovery package of nearly $2 trillion, describing it as too focused on corporations at the expense of workers.

Brent for May settlement lost $1.16 to $25.82 a barrel on the ICE Futures Europe Exchange after dropping to as low as $24.68 earlier. That’s less than the benchmark’s $24.88 a barrel close on Wednesday, which was the lowest since May 2003.

WTI for May delivery was 10 cents higher at $22.73 a barrel as of 10:45 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange after falling to as low as $20.80. Front-month futures plummeted 29% last week, the most since 1991.