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Oil falls as China sticks to strict COVID policy dashing hopes of demand rebound

Brent and WTI rose last week, up 2.9 percent and 5.4 percent, respectively, as rumours of a possible end to stringent COVID-19 lockdowns sent China's stock markets and prices of commodities higher despite the lack of any announced changes.

By Reuters Nov 7, 2022 8:01:53 AM IST (Updated)

2 Min Read
Oil prices fell more than 2 percent at the start of Asia trade on Monday after Chinese officials on the weekend reiterated their commitment to a strict COVID containment approach, dashing hopes of an oil demand rebound at the world's top crude importer.
Brent crude futures dropped $1.58, or 1.6 percent, to $96.99 a barrel by 23:36 GMT, after hitting as low as $96.50 earlier. US West Texas Intermediate crude was at $90.84 a barrel, down $1.77, or 1.9 percent, dropping to a session-low of $90.40 a barrel earlier in the session.
"Oil prices dropped sharply as the Chinese officials vowed to stick to the COVID-zero policy while infected cases climbed in China, which may cause more restrictions measures, darkening the demand outlook," CMC Markets analyst Tina Teng said.