U.S. stocks closed lower Monday, weighed by a sharp decline in energy as oil plunged to a near-seven-year low.
Stocks ended off session lows,
but the Dow Jones industrial average failed to hold in positive
territory for the year as Chevron (CVX) and Exxon Mobil (XOM) both closed down more than 2.5 percent. Goldman Sachs (GS) also weighed. The index closed about 115 points lower after earlier falling 206 points.
U.S. crude oil futures (New York Mercantile Exchange: @CL.1) settled down $2.32, or 5.80 percent, at $37.65 a barrel, the lowest level since February 2009.
"Obviously it's about oil below
$40, Brent at a new year-low. That's going to pressure things and induce
some profit-taking today," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist
at First Standard Financial. "After Friday's surge, the fact that oil
prices are ... lower is probably going to impact the market on the
negative side."
Energy closed down 3.67 percent
after earlier falling more than 4.5 percent as the greatest laggard in
the S&P 500, which dipped more than 1 percent.
The greatest sector decliners were natural gas-sensitive names CONSOL (CNX), Williams Cos. (WMB), ONEOK (OKE) and Devon Energy (DVN), which plunged more than 10 percent each. Natural gas settled down 5.4 percent at $2.067 for its lowest settle since Oct. 28.
The Alerian Master Limited Partnership ETF (AMLP) (NYSE Arca: AMLP)
pared losses to end about 7 percent lower, after briefly falling more
than 9 percent. "As the price of oil continues to collapse, it's really
raising questions about the group's ability to fund itself from a
dividend perspective," said Peter Coleman, head trader at Convergex.
Declines in biotech stocks and Apple also pressured the major averages.
The Dow transports closed down about 0.9 percent after dipping 1 percent, with only airlines advancing.
U.S. stock index futures turned lower in pre-market trade as the globally traded Brent
crude fell more than $1 to below $42 a barrel, a more than
six-and-a-half-year low. The decline came after the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries failed on Friday to agree on a production
curb to stem sliding prices and a stronger dollar made holding crude
positions more expensive.
Brent crude settled at $40.73, down 5.28 percent, for its lowest settle since Feb. 18, 2009.By : Evelyn Cheng.
Oil Prices Edge Up From Near Seven-Year Lows As China Oil Imports Surprise.
Crude prices edged away from nearly 7-year lows on Tuesday as China reported strong commodity imports despite economic weakness, but overall the market remained weak due to global oversupply compounded by OPEC's decision to keep output high.Benchmark Brent and WTI futures both fell over 6 percent the previous session to reach 2015 lows, and they are closing in on levels last seen during the credit crunch of 2008/2009. Should they break through 2008/2009 lows, the next downward target would be levels not seen since the early 2000s.
Internationally traded Brent futures LCOc1 were up 31 cents at $41.04 a barrel at 0805 GMT. U.S. crude CLc1 was trading at $37.82 a barrel, up just 17 cents from its last settlement and close to the 2015 and 7-year lows of the previous session.
"The decision by OPEC members to keep oil production output at record high levels ... suggested that the organization was effectively abandoning its long-term strategy of limiting production and acting as a cartel, leading to more downward pressures on oil prices in the short term," said Sanjiv Shah, Chief Investment Officer of Sun Global Investments.
"OPEC countries will continue to pump as much as possible for now," consultancy Energy Aspects said.
On the demand side, China's appetite for cheap oil was helping to support prices as the government looks to build up its strategic reserves.
"There is no doubt that weak commodity prices have induced some opportunistic buying. This should be mildly supportive for commodity markets," ANZ bank said.
But it added that given the country's slowing economy, "we still don't expect to see Chinese consumers start to aggressively restock with the outlook remaining weak."
China's crude oil imports for the first 11 months of the year rose 8.7 percent to 6.61 million barrels per day while its November crude imports grew 7.6 percent from the same month a year ago, according to preliminary customs data released Tuesday.
China's November new vehicle sales also jumped 17.6 percent over the same period.
With crude prices near record lows, China is seen as likely to double its strategic crude oil purchases in 2016, adding some 70-90 million barrels to its strategic petroleum reserves (SPR).
At the same time crude imports are rising, the preliminary customs figures show China's exports of refined products surged to 4.1 million tonnes in November, up 68 percent year-on-year. If the final numbers released later this month confirm the data, that would mean record exports of fuel from the country.
"As China continues to support the expansion of its (independent) 'teapot' refineries, allowing more imports of crude oil, we expect this pattern (of high product exports) to continue," ANZ said.
By:
Additional Reporting: Henning Gloystein.
Editing:Christian Schmollinger.
Review: Emerging Market Formulations & Research Unit, Flagship Records.