Home Finance Oil sells off, heads for worst day in six months as banking crisis routs markets

Oil sells off, heads for worst day in six months as banking crisis routs markets

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Oil sells off, heads for worst day in six months as banking crisis routs markets

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Oil production in Azerbaijan

Vostok | Getty Images

Oil prices fell sharply Wednesday, as traders feared a brewing banking crisis could dent global economic growth.

West Texas Intermediate futures fell more than 7% to $66.24 per barrel. That would be WTI’s biggest one-day drop since July 12, 2022 — when it plunged 7.9%. Brent crude, the international benchmark, slid 6.6% to $72.30 per barrel.

The drop came as global risk markets sold off following news that Credit Suisse’s biggest investor, the Saudi National Bank, would not provide more assistance for the embattled bank. The news led to a more than 20% drop in the bank’s U.S.-listed shares. It also raised concern over the state of the global banking system less than a week after two U.S. regional banks failed.

The stress in the smaller banks led Goldman Sachs to cut its U.S. GDP growth forecast.

“Small and medium-sized banks play an important role in the US economy,” Goldman economists wrote. “Banks with less than $250bn in assets account for roughly 50% of US commercial and industrial lending, 60% of residential real estate lending, 80% of commercial real estate lending, and 45% of consumer lending.”

“US policymakers have taken aggressive steps to shore up the financial system, but concerns about stress at some banks persists,” they added. “Ongoing pressure could cause smaller banks to become more conservative about lending in order to preserve liquidity in case they need to meet depositor withdrawals, and a tightening in lending standards could weigh on aggregate demand.”

The Federal Reserve is slated to hold a policy meeting next week. Entering this week, traders had priced in at least a 25 basis-point rate hike. However, CME Group’s FedWatch tool now shows nearly a 2-to-1 chance of rates staying at current levels.

— CNBC’s Christopher Hayes contributed to this report.

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