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Oil Prices Rebound 1% After Tariff-Induced Selloff, But Recession Fears Linger

Global oil markets experienced a modest recovery on Tuesday, with prices climbing more than 1% after a brutal selloff driven by fears that new U.S. tariffs could trigger a worldwide economic slowdown. The rebound offered temporary relief to energy investors, but analysts warned the recovery remains fragile as trade tensions between Washington and Beijing escalate.

Market Movements
At 00:51 GMT Tuesday:

  • Brent crude futures rose 1.26% to $65.02 per barrel
  • West Texas Intermediate (WTI) gained 1.52% to $61.61

This followed Monday’s 2% plunge that brought prices near four-year lows, as markets digested the potential consequences of President Trump’s proposed tariffs of 10-50% on all U.S. imports.

The Tariff Domino Effect
Energy economists identify three key transmission channels through which tariffs could impact oil markets:

  1. Demand Destruction
    • Potential global GDP reduction of 0.5-1.5% if tariffs escalate (IMF estimates)
    • Every 1% drop in global growth equates to ~500,000 bpd lost oil demand
  2. Supply Chain Disruptions
    • 18% of global oil trade flows through tariff-vulnerable routes
    • Potential delays at key chokepoints like the Malacca Strait
  3. Currency Volatility
    • Strengthening dollar making oil more expensive for emerging markets
    • Yuan depreciation pressures complicating China’s crude purchases

Production Economics Provide Floor
While demand concerns dominate headlines, supply-side factors may prevent prices from collapsing further:

  • U.S. shale break-even costs cluster around $60/bbl for WTI
  • 23% of Permian Basin operators become cash-negative below $58
  • OPEC+ likely to extend production cuts if prices approach $60

“The market is caught between two powerful forces,” explained Rystad Energy analyst Sofia Guidi. “Recession fears are pulling prices down, while production costs and OPEC’s resolve are creating a floor.”

What’s Next?
Traders will closely monitor:

  • June 10: Next OPEC+ policy meeting
  • June 15: Deadline for next U.S. tariff escalation
  • July: Peak U.S. driving season demand test

As the EIA revises its 2024 demand growth forecast downward (from 1.1 mb/d to 0.8 mb/d), the oil market’s recovery appears precarious at best.

 

Oil Prices Rebound 1% After Tariff-Induced Selloff, But Recession Fears Linger

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