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Oil prices fall on reports Israel will not strike Iran supply facilities
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Oil prices fall on reports Israel will not strike Iran supply facilities

AFP

NEW YORK—Oil prices tumbled on Tuesday on reports that Israeli Prime Minister (PM) Benjamin Netanyahu told US President Joe Biden he would not strike Iran’s crude or nuclear facilities.

Crude prices were also pulled lower by worries about demand in China after Beijing did not announce new stimulus for its stuttering economy at a weekend briefing. Major stock markets largely fell, with New York giving up gains from Monday, when the market hit record highs.

Key US oil contract West Texas Intermediate dropped more than 5 percent to below $70 a barrel at one stage but recovered to $70.58. European benchmark Brent North Sea crude slipped by 4.1 percent.

Iran’s retaliatory missile attacks on Israel this month sent crude prices soaring on fears that further strikes in response would disrupt oil supplies. But reports of the Israeli PM’s assurances “alleviated some of that supply concern,” said Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

“With the geopolitical risk-premium falling, prices are once again being led by the struggling demand picture,” he added.

The International Energy Agency said global oil markets remain “adequately” supplied thanks to the end of a Libyan oil blockade, weaker demand and relatively modest output losses from hurricanes in the US Gulf Coast.

China woes

Adding to downward pressure is concern that China, the world’s largest crude importer, is failing to reignite its ailing economy. Investors have been left disappointed by lack of detail from China Finance Minister Lan Fo’an over the scale of stimulus measures to jump-start the world’s second-largest economy.

“Everywhere you look, China is in desperate need for fiscal support, with very weak domestic demand alongside an economy facing deflationary pressures and softer global demand,” said Rodrigo Catril, a senior strategist at National Australia Bank.

Those concerns weighed on the region’s stock markets, with Hong Kong closing down nearly 4 percent on Tuesday and Shanghai shedding 2.5 percent. Wall Street tumbled to end on Tuesday as well, with investors assessing earnings reports and chipmaker equities weakening—the latter on demand concerns and news the United States may introduce export curbs.

Markets reacted mostly positively to financial results initially, including those of Goldman Sachs, whose third-quarter profit jumped almost 50 percent. But chipmakers struggled after reports that the Biden administration was considering a cap on exports of advanced AI chips to some countries.

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Dutch tech giant ASML, which supplies chip-making machines to the semiconductor industry, also saw its shares dive in Europe and the United States after unveiling a cut to 2025 guidance and seeing a slump in sales bookings.

Chip titan Nvidia lost 4.5 percent, while AMD was down 5.2 percent.

“The sell-off is because of ASML suggesting that demand is not as strong” as anticipated for chips and AI, said Quincy Krosby of LPL Financial.

London closed lower despite official data showing that Britain’s unemployment and wage growth had eased, boosting analyst expectations that the Bank of England would resume interest rate cuts next month.

Paris stocks dropped but Frankfurt closed little-changed after a survey showed German investor confidence rose more than expected in October.


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