(Bloomberg) -- Oil declined after China’s highly anticipated Finance Ministry briefing on Saturday lacked new incentives to boost consumption in the biggest importer, with the specter of Israeli strikes on Iran hanging over the market. Most Read from Bloomberg Dubai’s Allure to Expats Is Weighing on City’s Infrastructure The Master Plan That Shaped Pakistan’s Capital Is No Longer Working The Cablebus Transformed Commutes in Mexico City’s Populous Outskirts As Brussels Booms, an Old Boogeyman Returns: Brusselization Chicago Marathon to Honor Kenyan Who Died After His World Record Brent fell almost 2% early on Monday before recovering to trade near $78. West Texas Intermediate dropped below $75. Despite Beijing’s promises of more support for the struggling property sector and hinting at greater government borrowing, the briefing didn’t produce the headline dollar figure for fresh fiscal stimulus that the markets had sought. Meanwhile, oil traders are continuing to monitor Israel’s response to Iran’s Oct. 1 ballistic missile attack, with one report suggesting it has narrowed down potential targets to military and energy infrastructure. Over the weekend, a Hezbollah drone attack killed four Israeli soldiers, while the Pentagon said it would send an advanced missile defense system and associated troops to help shield its ally. “A bumpy recovery in Chinese demand overshadowed the concerns of further escalation in the Middle East, which could dampen the flow of oil barrels from the key producing nations,” Priyanka Sachdeva, a senior market analyst at brokerage Phillip Nova Pte in Singapore, said in a note. “Oil prices are largely expected to be range bound.” Brent has risen about 9% this month as the prospect of an escalation in the Middle East conflict threatens output from a region that supplies about a third of the world’s oil. The tensions have seen hedge funds flee bearish bets against the crude benchmark at the fastest pace in nearly eight years. To get Bloomberg’s Energy Daily newsletter into your inbox, click here. Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek Jamie Dimon for Treasury Secretary: The Idea That Never Fades Inside the Companies That Set Sports Gambling Odds Lina Khan Is Just Getting Started (She Hopes) The Robotaxi Verdict Is In—And Wall Street Is Taking the Train Why Is It So Hard for Clothing Resale Platforms to Make Money? ©2024 Bloomberg L.P.
Oil falls after China briefing with eyes on Israel-Iran conflict
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