Oil prices fell to a six-week low on Friday amid demand concerns after Austria announced a nationwide lockdown.
But for consumers looking for some relief at the pump, the declines are not yielding any immediate lower fuel prices. The national average for a gallon of gas stood around a seven-year high of $3.41 on Friday, according to AAA.
The U.S. benchmark for oil sank more than 4% to a session low of $75.37, a price not seen since 7 October. Crude traded in the green earlier in the US session, but fell into the negative territory following news of Austria’s lockdowns.
The demand rebound has been a key driver of oil’s recovery this year, and any indication that it might ease will ignite traders’ fears.
A move below $80 could deepen the correction, perhaps pulling the price back towards the mid-$70 region.
The December futures contract expires today, with the more actively traded contract for January delivery dipping 3.8% to $75.44 per barrel. Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, traded as low as $78.15 for the first time since 1 October.
Both WTI and Brent are on track for a fourth straight week of losses, which is the longest weekly losing streak since March 2020.
Tags austria brent Crude oil lockdown West Texas Intermediate
Check Also
RBA Holds Rates Steady, Signals Prolonged Tight Monetary Policy Amid Persistent Inflation
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) maintained its benchmark interest rate at 4.35% on Tuesday, …