Oil futures crashed over 30 percent in Monday trading, with the drop being the second-largest in history, second only to the 1991 price plunge taking place during the Gulf War, with leading global price benchmark Brent crude dipping to as little as $32 a barrel.

Brent crude futures collapsed to their worst showing since the late 1990s on Monday in Asia trading, and may continue to plummet to just $20 a barrel, global investment banking firm Goldman Sachs has warned.

Amid the market plunge, the company has already revised its third and second quarter price forecast down to $30 a barrel, and warned clients that the drop may continue in the near future.

According to the analyst, the present situation “completely changes the outlook for the oil and gas markets…and brings back the playbook of the New Oil Order, with low-cost producers increasing supply from their spare capacity to force higher-cost producers to reduce output.”

Fracking drill rig

Among the high-cost producers potentially on the chopping block are US shale, which has an average breakeven price of as high as $68 per barrel.

The price of May futures for Brent crude dropped by 28.69 percent on Monday to $32.28 per barrel, with April futures for WTI crude dropping by 31.35 percent to $28.33.

The logo of Aramco is seen as security personnel stand before the start of a press conference by Aramco at the Plaza Conference Center in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia November 3, 2019

The drop came after the Saudi-led Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its non-OPEC partners including Russia failed to reach a deal on a collective production cut in talks in Vienna, Austria on Friday, with OPEC+ subsequently abolishing output restrictions, and Saudi Arabia launching a price war, slashing official selling prices for April futures by $6-$8.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

Oil in Turmoil: Prices Could Collapse to as Little as $20 a Barrel, Goldman Sachs Warns

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