Chart Of The Day: Crude Black Friday Sale 

 | Nov 26, 2021 14:02

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com.

Concern that a new Covid variant will prompt fresh mobility restrictions and hinder the economic recovery, has roiled the global markets today. Every risk asset you can think of has fallen, with crude oil and travel stocks taking the brunt of the sell-off.

Although we know very little about the new Covid variant, and it hasn’t spread very far yet, investors have taken decisive action. Experts’ alarming warnings mean it has the potential to hit the global economy very hard.

Cases of the existing Covid variants have already soared across Europe, prompting a number of countries to introduce restrictions to slow the spread of the virus. But the new variant adds a degree or two of urgency as it has “a large number of mutations,” according to the WHO, implying that it may be resistant to the current Covid vaccines.

Already, the UK has announced a temporary flight ban from a number of southern African countries. If more countries follow suit, we could see demand for air travel fall. This is why airline stocks and crude prices have slumped today. 

While we don’t know how infectious the variant may turn out to be, and whether the current vaccines will be effective against it, the slump in crude prices comes just as the US and a few other oil consuming nations are releasing crude from their strategic reserves to add output to the global supply. 

Until today, the feeling among market participants was that the OPEC+ group will stick with the policy of raising output by 400,000 barrels per day at its meeting next week. However, the potential for more lockdowns means demand in Q1 could fall sharply, raising the prospect of the OPEC+ potentially holding back supply.

Therefore, the downside could be limited from here ahead of the OPEC+ meeting on Dec. 2 and with oil prices having fallen nearly 15% from their multi-year highs hit in October. But that’s not to say prices won’t weaken a little further over the coming days, especially if worries about the new variant of Covid intensify. So, the upside should be capped until at least the OPEC+ meeting on Dec. 2.