Oil Prices Fall as China Data Adds to Demand Woes

Oil prices declined on Monday, dragged down by weak economic data from China and a stronger US dollar. Benchmark Brent crude dropped 1.2% to $85.72 per barrel while WTI slid 0.9% to $82.46.

Prices had rebounded in recent weeks after Saudi Arabia announced further output cuts in June as part of the OPEC+ agreement. However, the gains proved short-lived.

Latest figures from China showed deflation in consumer prices and extended declines in factory gate inflation. Customs data also revealed exports plunged 14.5% in July, the largest drop since early 2020, while imports fell 12.4%.

Manufacturing activity continued to contract in July according to official PMI data, adding to concerns over fuel demand in the world's second-largest oil consumer. Other Chinese economic indicators have also disappointed.

Additionally, the US dollar strengthened against major currencies after US inflation data showed consumer prices rose 3.2% annually in July. A stronger dollar makes crude imports more expensive for countries using other currencies.

While OPEC+ supply cuts have supported prices, weak Chinese economic data and a rallying greenback are capping gains. Investors remain worried about the outlook for global demand as recession risks grow.

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