Oil prices fell on Friday, extending the previous day’s plunge, as lingering fears of a recession weighed on sentiment, putting the benchmarks on track for their third straight weekly losses.
Brent crude futures were down 43 cents, or 0.4 percent, at $108.60 a barrel by 0653 GMT, giving up earlier gains of more than $1.
WTI crude futures for August delivery slid 60 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $105.16 a barrel, also surrendering an early gain of nearly $1.
For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel online or via the app.
Both contracts fell around 3 percent on Thursday.
“Earlier in the session, the market took a breather from Thursday’s sell-off as the OPEC+ gave no surprise, saying it would stick to its planned oil output hikes in August,” said Tsuyoshi Ueno, senior economist at NLI Research Institute.
“But uncertainty over OPEC+ policy in and after September and fears that the aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve would lead to a US recession and hamper fuel demand dampened sentiment,” he said.
On Thursday, the OPEC+ group of producers, including Russia, agreed to stick to its output strategy after two days of meetings. However, the producer club avoided discussing policy from September onward.
Previously, OPEC+ decided to increase output each month by 648,000 barrels per day (bpd) in July and August, up from a previous plan to add 432,000 bpd per month.
Elsewhere, 74 Norwegian offshore oil workers at Equinor’s Gudrun, Oseberg South and Oseberg East platforms will go on strike from July 5, the Lederne trade union said on Thursday, likely halting about 4 percent of Norway’s oil production.
Oil prices are expected to stay above $100 a barrel this year as Europe and other regions struggle to wean themselves off Russian supply, a Reuters poll showed on Thursday, though economic risks could slow the climb.
Read more:
Shell expected to sign deal with Qatar for giant gas project
Technical problem with Nord Stream 1 a Russian pretext: German minister
Europe ready for Baltics emergency switch-off from Russian grid