Oil plunges to lowest since pandemic; natural gas, soy slump as China retaliates
- Oil prices dropped by $10 per barrel due to new U.S. Tariffs and OPEC+'s decision to increase production, with ICE Brent falling below $65 per barrel for the first time since August 2021.
- China's Finance Ministry announced 34% tariffs on U.S. Goods effective April 10, worsening trade tensions.
- The International Monetary Fund warned that this trade conflict poses a 'significant risk' to global economic health, potentially lowering GDP growth forecasts.
- OPEC+ decided to increase output by 411,000 b/d, reversing previous production cuts sooner than planned.
155 Articles
155 Articles
Oil plunges to lowest since pandemic; natural gas, soy slump as China retaliates
Oil prices plunged on Friday to the lowest level since 2021 and commodities including natural gas and soybeans also dived as China retaliated against U.S. President Donald Trump's aggressive tariffs.
Trump's Tariffs Trigger Biggest Oil Price Drop Since 2021
Oil prices plunged this week as a one-two punch of sweeping U.S. import tariffs and an unexpected OPEC+ supply hike erased $10 per barrel from global benchmarks. Friday, April 04, 2025 The combined effect of Donald Trump’s import tariffs, OPEC+’s inopportune decision to speed up the unwinding of production cuts and China’s retaliatory actions have wiped off $10 per barrel from global oil prices, with ICE Brent falling below $65 per barrel for th…
Dow on correction path as China strikes back against US tariffs
The Dow fell 10% from its record closing high in December, putting it on track to confirm a correction on Friday, after China retaliated with fresh tariffs a day after the Trump administration announced sweeping levies on trade partners.
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