World’s biggest economies remain on rocky ground

The world’s two biggest economies (China, US) are not showing good economic data while sovereign debt in Europe adds to mounting concern. Is recession getting its second wind?
July 11, 2011 11:54 by Reuters
Oil fell for a second day on Monday after a drop in China’s crude imports and disappointing US employment data rekindled concerns of a demand slowdown at the world’s top two energy consumers.
Worries that the sovereign debt crisis in Europe may spread to Italy, the region’s third largest economy, also made investors edgy, keeping them away from risky assets.
Brent crude for August slid 62 cents to $117.71 a barrel at 0608 GMT, still less than $10 from this year’s peak above $127, while US crude benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) shed 60 cents to $95.60.
China’s crude imports tumbled by 11.5 percent in June from a year earlier to 4.8 million barrels per day (bpd), their lowest in eight months.
ASIA CALLING
Fears that Beijing may raise interest rates further to contain the fastest inflation in three years dampened risk appetite, said Ben Le Brun, market analyst with CMC Markets.
Brent on Friday dipped 0.2 percent after data showed U.S. jobs growth ground to a near halt in June as employers hired the fewest workers in nine months.
“It’s a combination of both pieces of news, the world’s two biggest consumers with not good economic data,” Le Brun said from Sydney.
“The drop in China’s imports probably has to do with the tightening of rates in the past six to 12 months and the US jobs report was a very bad miss. Considering all the headwinds that we have had recently, the market has held quite well.”
Reduced loadings of North Sea crude were also supportive for Brent on Friday, while front-month WTI plunged by almost $2.50.
WTI’s discount to Brent hovered close to $22 on Monday after it widened to as much as $22.45 in the previous session, the highest since the intraday record of $23.34 on June 15, on news that output from the North Sea Forties oil stream will slip to a two-year low in August.
Last week’s gains in Brent pushed prices well above the level prior to the release of global emergency stockpiles coordinated by the International Energy Agency, as traders bet the extra 60 million barrels of oil would be insufficient to stop markets tightening later this year.
Money managers raised their net-long U.S. crude futures and options positions in the week to July 5, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said on Friday.
Iran’s caretaker oil minister said on Saturday that OPEC was opposed to any increase in output ceilings in the absence of “well-studied justifications”.
SAUDI BARRELS
Saudi Arabia’s offer for additional crude in August met scant interest from refiners across northeast Asia who are just taking their full contractual volumes, while one buyer in India and one in Southeast Asia accept extra barrels.
Limited demand for extra barrels from Asia, the world’s fastest-growing market, would leave the Saudis with few options to find homes for additional cargoes. Top exporter Saudi Aramco was expected to have raised output to near 10 million barrels per day (bpd) in June.
In the currency market, the euro fell back close to a record low versus the Swiss franc, hurt by renewed jitters over the euro zone’s debt crisis ahead of an emergency meeting of European officials.
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy over the weekend called an emergency meeting of top officials dealing with the euro zone debt crisis for Monday morning, reflecting concern that the crisis could spread to Italy. (By Alejandro Barbajosa; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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