3 Bearish Factors Facing Oil Markets In 2022

 | Dec 02, 2021 03:47AM ET

By Osama Rizvi

  • Oil prices plunged on the back of the discovery of a new COVID variant, but Omicron isn’t the only bearish factor in today’s oil markets
  • The resurgence of tensions between China and the U.S. could well spark another trade war between the two superpowers
  • A strong U.S. dollar and rising inflation will also play a role in pushing oil prices down even if Omicron fears subside

Just when the world started to embrace some normalcy in terms of the global economy and social mobility, a new variant from South Africa, technically called B.1.1.529 and named Omicron , has emerged as policy-makers, politicians, and investors brace themselves for yet another wave of Coronavirus-related restrictions.

The UK has already put a ban on people traveling from certain African countries, so has the U.S.; others are following suit.

The new strain rocked the oil markets as the Brent benchmark lost 10.7 percent in a single day when the news came out—the largest single-day drop since April last year. While this will be the focus for oil markets in the coming weeks and days, it isn’t the only bearish factor in oil markets right now.

Three interrelated factors, namely the U.S. - China trade war, a rising dollar, and soaring inflation, will also hinder oil’s much-talked-about ascent to $100 (the price many banks and institutions tend to think oil will eventually return to).

Brent and WTI both plunged on the day the news came out, and despite a brief respite have continued to trend downward since. Countries such as the UK, the U.S., Brazil, India, Japan, Australia, Thailand, and Canada have either imposed travel bans or are in the process of doing so on flights from Africa. This has caused renewed fears of lockdowns.

However, there have been some important developments vis à vis the U.S.-China trade war as well. China has criticized the U.S. for placing dozens of its companies on a blacklist, the famous Entity List, and said that it could hamper the progress made so far in terms of thawing economic relations between the world’s two largest economies.

At the same time, China told its ride-hailing service, Didi Global (NYSE:DIDI) to delist from the New York Stock Exchange on “concerns about data security.”

Furthermore, China failed to meet its target in terms of imports from the U.S. as part of the trade deal. As the graph below shows, it was only able to meet 56 percent of its promised amount.