Oil futures knocked to 5 1/2-year low
Oil futures fell Monday, stretching their losing streak to a third session and hitting their lowest levels in more than five years on concerns over a surging U.S. dollar and nagging worries of growing oil supplies.
Sweet crude for delivery in February CLG5, +0.32% fell $2.65, or 5%, to settle at $50.04 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices traded as low as $49.77 a barrel earlier in the session.
February Brent on London’s ICE Futures exchange LCOG5, +0.32% declined $3.31, or 5.9%, to end at $53.11 a barrel, the lowest settlement since May 1, 2009. Brent has lost 8.3% over the past three sessions.
Sweet crude for delivery in February CLG5, +0.32% fell $2.65, or 5%, to settle at $50.04 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices traded as low as $49.77 a barrel earlier in the session.
February Brent on London’s ICE Futures exchange LCOG5, +0.32% declined $3.31, or 5.9%, to end at $53.11 a barrel, the lowest settlement since May 1, 2009. Brent has lost 8.3% over the past three sessions.
Current Market Update
Here are the latest trading levels for Asia's major stock markets:
Tokyo (Nikkei Average) down 2.8%
Hong Kong (Hang Seng Index) down 1.5% (at break)
Shanghai (Shanghai Composite Index) down 1% (at break)
Sydney (S&P/ASX 200) down 2%
Seoul (Kospi) down 1.6%
Mumbai (Sensex) down 1.4%
Taipei (Taiex) down 2.2%
Tokyo (Nikkei Average) down 2.8%
Hong Kong (Hang Seng Index) down 1.5% (at break)
Shanghai (Shanghai Composite Index) down 1% (at break)
Sydney (S&P/ASX 200) down 2%
Seoul (Kospi) down 1.6%
Mumbai (Sensex) down 1.4%
Taipei (Taiex) down 2.2%
Asian Market Update
Asian markets tumbled Tuesday following painful losses in New York and Europe while the euro sat near nine-year lows as political uncertainty in Greece fanned renewed fears it could leave the eurozone.
Oil prices, which fell below the psychological US$50 a barrel mark in US trade, edged up marginally but remained under pressure owing to a global supply glut, weak demand and a stronger dollar.
Tokyo tumbled 2.50 per cent, Hong Kong lost 0.89 per cent, Sydney eased 1.67 per cent, Seoul was 1.30 per cent lower while Shanghai reversed earlier losses to gain 0.70 per cent.
Oil prices, which fell below the psychological US$50 a barrel mark in US trade, edged up marginally but remained under pressure owing to a global supply glut, weak demand and a stronger dollar.
Tokyo tumbled 2.50 per cent, Hong Kong lost 0.89 per cent, Sydney eased 1.67 per cent, Seoul was 1.30 per cent lower while Shanghai reversed earlier losses to gain 0.70 per cent.
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