WHO's Emergency Committee is set for another meeting later on Thursday to reconsider whether the rapid spread of the virus should now be called a global emergency.
Market
News : Oil prices fell on Thursday as the death toll from the
new virus in China climbed to 170 and more airlines cancelled flights
to the country's major cities, while rising US crude inventories
added to the negative tone.
Brent
was down 35 cents, or 0.6 per cent, at $59.46 a barrel by 7:55 am,
having risen 0.5 per cent on Wednesday. US crude was down 30 cents,
or 0.6 per cent, at $53.03 a barrel, after dropping 0.3 per cent in
the previous session.
Still,
oil prices have steadied in recent days after a rout that pushed them
to three-month lows and the market is trying to assess the damage to
economic growth and demand for crude and its products.
"There
isn't a compelling case crude needs to go lower until we know more
about how bad the demand destruction from the coronavirus
epidemic is going to be," said Stratfor oil analyst, Greg
Priddy.
A
second flight of Japanese evacuees from Wuhan, China, where the
outbreak started, landed in Japan on Thursday, with nine showing
symptoms of fever or coughing, broadcaster NHK reported. Infections
in China have passed 7,700.
The
World Health Organisation's Emergency Committee is set for another
meeting later on Thursday to reconsider whether the rapid spread of
the virus should now be called a global emergency.
Airlines
around the world are suspending or reducing direct flights to major
cities in China as travel warnings are issued by governments and
passenger numbers drop.
Bigger-than-expected
gains in US
crude oil inventories last week also meant "oil prices were
dealt the cruellest hand of them all," said Stephen Innes, chief
market strategist at AxiCorp.
Crude
stocks rose by more than seven times market expectations, gaining 3.5
million barrels in the week to Jan. 24, the US Energy Information
Administration (EIA) said on Wednesday.
Gasoline
stocks rose to a record high, increasing for a 12th consecutive week
to 261.1 million barrels, the EIA said.
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