Crude Oil Tumbles After Doha Meeting Ends Without Agreement

 | Apr 18, 2016 06:25AM ET

Market Brief

Oil prices collapsed on Monday after major oil producers failed on Sunday to agree an output freeze. The West Texas Intermediate (WTI) fell 4.73% to $38.45 a barrel, while the international gauge, the Brent crude, collapsed 4.64% to $41.10 a barrel. Over the last few days, oil prices have been trading sideways as markets anticipated tough negotiations, with WTI tumbling on the $42-$43 resistance range. Even though the failure of the Doha negotiations highlighted the inability of the major oil producers to find common ground, particularly Iran and Saudi Arabia, we do not believe that this could push crude oil prices further down as nothing has really changed in the bigger picture.

The risk sentiment deteriorates on Monday after news of the failure to reach a deal. Equities were sold off in Asia as investors fled to safe haven assets, such as the Japanese yen and the Swiss franc, to a certain extend. In Japan, the Nikkei and the Topix index slid 3.33% and 3.03%, respectively, while in mainland China, the CSI 300 tumbled 1.35%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 1.37% and Singapore’s STI slipped 0.70%. In Europe, equity futures were also blinking red across the screen, with the Footsie down -1.07%, the DAX -1.25% and the SMI -0.72%.