In a report dated Dec. 5, U.S. investment bank Morgan Stanley said
oil prices could fall as low as $43 a barrel next year. The bank cut
its average 2015 Brent base-case outlook by $28 to $70 per barrel,
and by $14 to $88 a barrel for 2016.
"Without OPEC intervention, markets risk becoming unbalanced, with
peak oversupply likely in the second quarter of 2015," Morgan
Stanley analyst Adam Longson said.
Brent crude for January was down $2.22 at $66.85 a barrel by 7:10
EST, having fallen $2.30 to $66.77 - its lowest since October 2009.
U.S. crude was down $1.60 at $64.24 a barrel, after hitting a
session low of $64.14. The U.S. contract, also known as West Texas
Intermediate, touched $63.72 last week, its lowest since July 2009.
At a meeting last month, top oil exporter Saudi Arabia resisted
calls from poorer members of the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries to reduce production, driving a further slide in
prices, which have lost more than 40 percent since June.
The U.S. shale industry has yet to be hit by the slump in crude
prices, Baker Hughes said in a report on Friday, reporting that
three new U.S. oil-drilling rigs had been added in the last week.
"It was just a small increase, but nevertheless it was an increase
despite the sharp price drop," said Carsten Fritsch, senior oil and
commodities analyst at Commerzbank in Frankfurt.
"Given continued oversupply and still no sign yet that U.S. oil
production starts to show any reaction, perhaps prices will continue
to head lower," he added.
In Libya, state oil company NOC said on Sunday the country was
producing 800,000 barrels per day, though its El Sharara oilfield
was closed because of a pipeline blockade.
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Mixed Chinese trade data also unsettled prices.
China's imports shrank unexpectedly in November, falling 6.7
percent, while export growth slowed, fuelling concerns the world's
second-largest economy could be facing a sharp slowdown.
China's crude oil imports rose 9 percent in November from October to
6.18 million barrels per day, suggesting the country may be boosting
its reserves.
"If one looks at the overall economic indicators, they are all
showing a picture of China which is stagnating rather than having
strong growth," said Olivier Jakob, oil analyst at Petromatrix in
Zug, Switzerland.
(Additional Reporting by Manolo Serapio Jr in Singapore and Adam
Rose in Beijing; Editing by Christopher Johnson and Dale Hudson)
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