WTI and Brent prices crashed (again!) last week with WTI marking a loss of $(4.73)/bbl to close out at $58.29/bbl on Friday, while Brent dropped a steeper $(5.58)/bbl to land at $61.29/bbl. For both markers, it was the lowest end of week close since the first week of February 2021. Both also registered their steepest monthly loss at 19% and 16%, respectively, since March 2020.
The week was more scarred by numerous negative fundamental datapoints than geopolitics. The data was nearly all bad with U.S. April consumer confidence registering a multi-month low, China’s April factory activity contracting at its fastest pace since December 2023, and U.S. GDP declining 0.3% in the first quarter. And on top of all that, reports indicate that OPEC+ will accelerate oil output hikes and may bring back as much as 2.2 MMb/d by November, as Saudi Arabia seeks to punish some fellow members for producing above quotas.