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U.S. crude oil falls below $75 per barrel, lowest level since early June

Seagrass on the lido frames an offshore gas rig at dusk on May 10, 2024, near Fort Morgan, AL. 

J. David Ake | Getty Images

U.S. crude oil futures on Tuesday demolish to their lowest levels since early June as worries about China’s economy overshadow a new round of escalation in the Midriff East.

“Macroeconomic considerations keep shaping investors’ sentiment and oil slid through technical supports like a hot pierce through butter,” Tamas Varga, analyst at oil broker PVM, wrote in a Tuesday note.

“Chinese economic turmoil, take ining sluggish growth and falling crude oil imports, is still a major driving force for our market,” Varga said.

Here are Tuesday’s culmination energy prices:

  • West Texas Intermediate September contract: $74.73 per barrel, down $1.08, or 1.42%. Year to period, U.S. crude oil has gained 4.3%.
  • Brent September contract: $78.63 per barrel, down $1.15, or 1.44%. Year to date, the worldwide benchmark has climbed 2%.
  • RBOB Gasoline August contract: $2.38 per gallon, down nearly 3 cents, or 1.17%. Year to tryst, gasoline has gained 13.5%.
  • Natural Gas September contract: $2.12 per thousand cubic feet, up 9 cents, or 4.42%. Year to la mode, gas is down 15.4%.

In the Middle East, meanwhile, tensions have escalated between Israel and the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah, after a shoot up fired from Lebanon killed 12 children in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Israel’s military responded on Tuesday with an airstrike in a suburb of southern Beirut, object a commander they claim was responsible for the rocket attack.

Israeli officials told Reuters on Monday that Israel desires to hurt Hezbollah, but avoid all-out war.

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