Skip to Content
News & Analysis at your fingertips.

We use a range of cookies to give you the best possible browsing experience. By continuing to use this website, you agree to our use of cookies.
You can learn more about our cookie policy here, or by following the link at the bottom of any page on our site. See our updated Privacy Policy here.

Free Trading Guides
Subscribe
Please try again
Select

Live Webinar Events

0

Economic Calendar Events

0

Notify me about

Live Webinar Events
Economic Calendar Events

H

High

M

Medium

L

Low
More View More
Oil Futures Gap Down as Doha Oil Freeze Meeting Fails on Accord

Oil Futures Gap Down as Doha Oil Freeze Meeting Fails on Accord

Daniel Dubrovsky, Contributing Senior Strategist

Share:

Talking Points

  • WTI Crude Oil Futures gapped more than 3.5 percent lower on early Monday
  • Doha meeting on oil production freeze among key producers fails to come to an agreement
  • OPEC and other members to continue discussions at next scheduled meeting in June

Losing money trading Forex? This might be why.

WTI Crude Oil Futures gapped more than 3.5 percent lower to begin this week’s Asia trading session. The decline in the commodity occurred a few hours after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) hosted a meeting in Doha along with several other major oil producing nations such as Russia. Producers and many oil bulls were hoping the gathering would result in a halt in oil production at January 2016 levels – or perhaps even a cut – amidst a global supply glut and tumbling prices.

Ultimately, the Doha meeting ended with members not being able to come to an acceptable agreement. This means that major producers can continue to boost production, possibly further weighing crude prices. Notably Iran, the third largest oil producing OPEC member, did not attend the negotiation. Qatar’s oil minister said that OPEC and other members will continue consulting talks about production targets through to the next official meeting on June.

Both the commodity and sentiment-linked currencies swooned in response to the news. The Canadian and Australian Dollars along with the South African Rand and other commodity-producing emerging market currencies suffered distinctly in response. In particular, the US Dollar gapped higher against its Canadian counterpart, strengthening more than 0.9 percent to start this week’s trading session. Meanwhile, the anti-risk Japanese Yen strengthened materially alongside a sharp drop in the Nikkei 225. Even if the meeting turned out in an agreement, production levels would still remain near all-time highs.

DailyFX provides forex news and technical analysis on the trends that influence the global currency markets.

DISCLOSURES