Global oil benchmark, Brent crude, fell
on Tuesday, reflecting growing concerns that a two-month rally might be
fading, as supply looked set to keep rising and there appeared to be
little immediate prospect of demand keeping pace.
It fell by $1.27, or 3.15 per cent, to
$39 per barrel, while the United States’ benchmark, West Texas
Intermediate, fell by 3.35 per cent to $38.08 per barrel.
Brent, against which Nigeria’s oil is
priced, had on March 18 risen to $42.29, $4.29 higher than the country’s
benchmark of $38 per barrel for the 2016 budget.
Earlier, prices pared losses after
Federal Reserve chair, Janet Yellen, delivered remarks on the US economy
and monetary policy, according to CNBC.
Yellen, speaking to the Economic Club of
New York, noted in prepared remarks that recent readings on the
strength of the US economy since the beginning of the year had been
mixed.
Oil price has risen more than 45 per
cent since mid-February ahead of a meeting next month of the world’s
major producers to discuss an output freeze. But there is growing
scepticism about the outcome of the meeting.
“Verbal intervention, which has
obviously helped the market greatly over the past two months, combined
with a production slowdown in the US, has probably taken (oil) as far as
it can. Now the market really wants to see some action,” a Senior
Manager at Saxo Bank, Ole Hansen, was quoted to have said.
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