Oil prices passed red-alarm line

Oil prices passed red-alarm line
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Less than a week after experts gave hope to traders, their ‘worst case scenario’ has finally happened. On March 9, markets opened to oil prices surging to more than $100 a barrel for the first time in nearly four years. The price for a barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, was at $107.97 after trading resumed on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, up 16.5% from its March 6 closing price of $92.69. West Texas Intermediate, produced in the United States, was selling for about $106.22 a barrel. That’s 16.9% higher than its closing price on March 6 of $90.90.

“Look, you never know exactly the time frame of this, but, in the worst case, this is a week’s thing, this is not a months thing”

-US Energy Secretary Chris Wright.