Dollar rally sinks oil; Brent down more than U.S. crude

Reuters

Published Mar 10, 2015 03:24PM ET

Dollar rally sinks oil; Brent down more than U.S. crude

By Barani Krishnan

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A rallying dollar sent oil prices sharply lower on Tuesday, with Brent falling more than U.S. crude as players took profits on recent highs in Brent's premium, traders said.

Expectations of a mid-year U.S. interest rate hike pushed the dollar to multi-year highs, making commodities denominated in the greenback costlier for holders of other currencies. [USD/]

Brent, the London-traded global oil benchmark, settled almost 4 percent lower.

In New York, U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude closed down more than 3 percent, pressured by the strong dollar and expectations that data would show another record high in U.S. crude inventories last week from supply builds.

WTI fell less than Brent as players bet on a further narrowing of its discount to the London benchmark after forecasts for a modest build last week in the Cushing, Oklahoma delivery point for U.S. crude versus the rest of the country. [EIA/S]

"The dollar's might is creating unexpected headwinds for oil. Brent particularly is taking it harder than WTI as people unwind and take profit in the spread between the two," said Tariq Zahir, managing member at Tyche Capital Advisors in Laurel Hollow, New York.

Brent settled at $58.39 a barrel, down $2.14, and U.S. crude finished the session at $48.29, falling $1.71.

The Brent-U.S. crude differential fell to $7.41, its narrowest in a month, before settling at $8.10, nearer to Monday's settlement.

The spread, which commands one of the biggest volume trades in oil, has narrowed by nearly 40 percent since hitting a 13-month high of $13 in late February.

"Brent is looking increasingly heavy with a decline likely to lowest levels in almost four weeks expected within the next couple of sessions," oil analysts at Jefferies said in a note.

Between June and January, crude prices fell 60 percent on fears of a global oil glut and the refusal of Saudi Arabia and other OPEC members to cut output. Last month, Brent stabilized at around $60 and U.S. crude at around $50.

Saudi King Salman said on Tuesday his kingdom will continue with oil and gas exploration despite the price drop.

Forecasters surveyed by Reuters expected U.S. data to show crude inventories at a ninth straight week of record highs. [EIA/S]