Oil prices have crashed to below $30-a-barrel amid warnings the rout could reach as low as $10 and bring down petrol prices to levels last seen in 2009, reports The Telegraph.
Standard Chartered became the latest major bank to downgrade its oil outlook to $10, joining the likes of Goldman Sachs, RBS and Morgan Stanley in making ultra-bearish calls as prices have collapsed by 15pc this year.
Brent crude has now slipped to a fresh 12-year low of $30.41 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate – the US benchmark – is trading at $29.93 – a level last seen in December 2013. Analysts warned the oil market remains fundmentally out of balance as record over-supply and stagnant demand weighs on traders.
Standard Chartered said there was no bottom in sight until “money managers in the market conceded that matters had gone too far”.
“Given that no fundamental relationship is currently driving the oil market towards any equilibrium, prices are being moved almost entirely by financial flows caused by fluctuations in other asset prices, including the dollar and equity markets,” said Standard Chartered.
Oil last slumped to $10 during the height of the Asian financial crisis in 1998. A $10 world would lead to petrol prices falling back to 86p-per-litre, said Simon Williams at RAC.
“The last time we saw average prices this low was in early 2009”, said Mr Williams. “However, for prices to get this low the pound would have to get no weaker against the dollar than it is today.”
Christine Lagarde, chief of the International Monetary Fund, said supply and demand factors meant commodity prices were “likely to stay low for a sustained period”.
Calling the bottom of the market was “akin to catching a falling knife” in today’s febrile environment, said Michael Hewson at CMC.
“When the clamour for lower prices becomes a stampede, warning signs and alarm bells tend to start going off, which suggests that a more prudent approach might be advisable,” he said.
The warnings came as Opec – the cartel that controls a third of the world’s supply – said it would not cede to requests from some of its members to hold an emergency meeting.