Will Trump’s Tweets Win The Battle For Cheap Oil Again?

 | Feb 26, 2019 03:21AM ET

It's the oil market equivalent of one of Hollywood’s most famous movie taglines: “Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water …”

That promo was for the 1978 classic “Jaws 2”, which tells of the second coming of a great white man-killing shark. Monday’s scare in the oil market involved a different kind of predator: a U.S. president back to kill a rally in crude prices after destroying one just months ago.

Amid preparations for nuclear talks with North Korea's leader, Trump found time early on Monday to tweet that oil prices were too high and that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries should work on bringing them lower.

The result: a plunge of more than 3 percent in both New York-traded West Texas Intermediate crude and London’s Brent oil. The plunge short-circuited the broad rally of the past fortnight, leaving Brent with its sharpest one-day loss in two months.

For those who need to be reacquainted with the Trump tweeting saga and oil, here are the facts:

Trump ran an unofficial White House campaign against pricey oil with his tweets last year, as fears of short supply from U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil exports and production cuts by the Saudi-led OPEC and Russia drove WTI to nearly $77 a barrel and Brent above $86.

The OPEC+ alliance decided last summer to suspend its production cuts and expand supplies to appease the president, who had appeared worried about the fragile U.S. economic recovery and the impact of high pump prices on midterm elections last November.