Crude oil prices fell over 1 per cent on Thursday, deepening steep losses in recent days, after the US Federal Reserve increased interest rates and investors worried about a weakening global economy that could dent energy demand, according to Reuters report. Brent futures fell 76 cents, or 1.1 per cent, to $71.57 a barrel by 0002 GMT. The global benchmark on Wednesday posted its lowest settle since December 2021.


US West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) fell $1, or 1.5 per cent, to $67.60 a barrel. WTI in early trading on Thursday fell to a session low of $63.64 a barrel, the lowest since December 2021. Both Brent and WTI have fallen over 10 per cent since the start of this week.


On Wednesday afternoon, the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point. The move weighed on oil prices, as higher rates could slow economic growth and hit energy consumption. However, the Fed also signalled it may pause further increases, giving officials time to assess fallout from recent bank failures, wait for resolution of a political standoff over the US debt ceiling and monitor inflation.


Banking sector concerns have been prevalent, after US regulators on Monday seized First Republic, the third major US institution to fail in two months, with JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) agreeing to take $173 billion of the bank's loans, $30 billion of securities and $92 billion of deposits.


Investors awaited developments from the European Central Bank, which is set to raise interest rates for the seventh meeting in a row on Thursday as its long fight against stubborn inflation continues. The size of the move still is open to debate.


The ECB will announce its policy decision at 1215 GMT and Lagarde will hold a press conference at 1245 GMT.


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