English News

Oil climbs on weaker dollar, China, amid omicron caution

Reuters

 

 

 

Oil prices rose again on Wednesday as the dollar slipped, with risk appetite returning as some governments resist imposing lockdowns to curb the spread of the omicron Covid-19 variant and as China said it would be able to sustain economic growth

U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose 33 cents, or 0.5%, to $71.46 per barrel, after jumping 3.7% on Tuesday

Brent crude futures rose 16 cents, or 0.2%, to $74.14 a barrel after gaining 3.4% on Tuesday

Oil prices typically move inversely to the U.S. dollar, with a weaker greenback making commodities cheaper for those holding other currencies

Meanwhile a senior Chinese state planning official said on Wednesday Beijing would work to aid economic growth, including stepping up government spending, strengthening support to manufacturers and stabilizing industry supply chains

The country, the world’s biggest oil importer, would “strive to stabilize economic operations in the first quarter, the first half and even the whole year,” the official told Xinhua News Agency

Meanwhile, some governments are trying to hold off imposing new pandemic curbs to slow the spread of the omicron coronavirus variant, including in Britain and Australia, which should help support fuel demand

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he would not introduce new Covid-19 restrictions before Christmas, but said the government may need to take steps afterwards

In Australia, Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Wednesday ruled out lockdowns and instead urged people to get booster shots to protect themselves even as the country hit a pandemic high of more than 5,000 new infections

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