Crude
prices tanked in Asia Monday, with sentiment hit by Standard & Poor's
decision last week to cut Washington's top-notch credit rating for the first
time, analysts said.
In afternoon trade, New York's main contract light sweet
crude for September delivery tumbled $2.99, or 3.44 percent, to $83.89 a
barrel, from its closing price on Friday.
Brent North Sea crude for September delivery sank $2.83, or
2.59 percent, to $106.54.
"What we do feel is the re-rating of the debt in the US
has knocked confidence out of the market," said Jonathan Barratt,
Sydney-based managing director with Commodity Broking Services.
"With crude where it is at the moment, that confidence
will affect demand or expectations of demand in the market," he told AFP.
The United States, the world's largest oil consumer, saw its
top-notch AAA credit rating downgraded for the first time when S&P on
Friday cut it to AA+ with a negative outlook on concerns over its debt.
"The announcement was not really a surprise because the
S&P had been very clear about what it wanted to see in order for the US to
maintain its AAA rating, and the agreement reached last week had not met those
criteria," Barclays Capital said in a report.
"To many observers, it was really a question of when it
would happen rather than whether it would, though probably few expected it to
be quite so soon."
US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Sunday fiercely
criticised the agency's move, saying the world's largest economy remained
strong and resilient.
"I think S&P has shown really terrible judgement and
they've handled themselves poorly, and they have shown a stunning lack of
knowledge about basic US fiscal budget math, and I think they came to exactly
the wrong conclusion," Geithner said in an interview with NBC News and
CNBC.
"There is no risk the US would never meet its
obligations. We've got some challenge ahead of us, but we'll be able to work
through the challenges. We'll get through this."
The decline in oil prices mirrored the general volatility in
global financial markets shaken by the US rating downgrade.
Asian stocks tumbled on Monday, with Tokyo down two percent,
Hong Kong down four percent and Sydney 2.4 percent off.
Financial chiefs and central bankers of the G7 industrialised
nations pledged to "take all necessary measures" in coordinated
action to support stability and the European Central Bank said it would buy up
eurozone debt.
Fears of a global meltdown, which some see as potentially
worse than the 2008 collapse, sent leaders into a flurry of phone calls between
Berlin, London, Paris and Washington to stem the tide.
Source : AFP
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