Oil prices edge lower after booking strong first quarter

Environment

In this article

An energy installation on a property leased to Devon Energy Production Company by the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City is seen near Guthrie, Oklahoma
Nick Oxford | Reuters

Crude oil futures ticked slightly lower Monday, taking a breather after a strong first quarter.

The West Texas Intermediate contract for May delivery lost 33 cents, or 0.4%, to $82.84 a barrel in the first day of trading for the second quarter. The Brent contract for June delivery dropped 40 cents, or 0.49%, to $86.57 a barrel.

U.S. crude and Brent also booked three consecutive months of gains. WTI is up 15.5% for the year while Brent is up 12.3%.

Oil has been grinding higher this year on expectations of strong global demand as OPEC+ holds barrels off the market through at least the second quarter.

Geopolitical risk also remains present in the market as Ukraine strikes Russian oil refineries, and Houthi militant attacks in the Red Sea have led to the diversion crude deliveries around the Cape of Good Hope in southern Africa.

Articles You May Like

News or noise? Orioles move in fences, Yankees protect Caleb Durbin
Putin’s reaction to any Russian deaths will be crucial to watch – after stunning shift in US policy on long-range missiles
Biden allows Kyiv to begin firing US rockets deep into Russia – as politician warns it ‘risks World War Three’
Arizona is getting 200 MW of Tesla battery storage to meet rising energy demand
Tesla slashes Model Y lease price as it attempts record deliveries