Oil Retreats as US and China Growth Concerns Weigh

Oil slipped on Monday, weighed down by Moody’s downgrade of the US sovereign credit rating and official data that showed slowing growth in China’s industrial output and retail sales.
Both developments raised concerns over the outlook for the world’s two biggest economies and oil consumers a week after Beijing and Washington’s agreement to roll back most tariffs on each other’s goods pushed oil prices higher.
“The weaker than expected Chinese data is not helping crude oil, although I would describe the setback as modest,” said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo, Reuters reported.
Brent crude futures lost 57 cents, or 0.9%, to $64.84 a barrel by 1146 GMT while US West Texas Intermediate crude slipped by 54 cents, or 0.9%, to $61.95. The nearby June WTI contract expires on Tuesday.
Both contracts rose more than 1% last week.
Also weighing on the market were comments from US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that President Donald Trump will impose tariffs at the rate he threatened last month on trading partners that do not negotiate in “good faith”.