Oil heads for third
straight weekly loss as supply weighs
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[December 18, 2015]
By Karolin Schaps
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices edged higher
on Friday as investors closed positions ahead of the end of the year
though crude was still heading for a third weekly loss in a row, its
longest losing streak in four months.
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Global benchmark Brent crude prices were trading up 38 cents at
$37.44 a barrel at 1000 GMT while U.S. crude futures traded at
$35.02 a barrel, a rise of seven cents from Thursday's close.
A global supply glut that brought prices close to 11-year lows this
week means Brent oil prices will post losses for a third consecutive
year, which would be the first time that has happened since oil
trading started in the 1980s.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures are set for a second straight
yearly loss, the first time that will have happened for the U.S. oil
pricing benchmark since 1998.
Many investors finished closing their books for 2015 on Friday ahead
of the holiday break and some expected oil prices to rise further
during the day as others closed out positions that had been
benefiting from the slide in prices.
"I would not be surprised to see some rally today as some kind of
pre-weekend profit taking," PVM Oil Associates analyst Tamas Varga
said.
Still, traders were preparing for even lower crude prices next year
by taking up more put options to sell U.S. crude in February should
prices fall to $30, $25 or even $20 per barrel, according to Reuters
data.
The seemingly unstoppable decline in oil is raising concerns about
investment in future supplies, IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol
said on Friday in Singapore.
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"The current low oil price make me worried because it means lower
investments in new oil projects," he said.
"This year, oil investments declined more than 20 percent and more
importantly we expect it will decline next year as well," Birol
said. "We have never seen in the last 30 years oil investments
decline two years in a row in the world."
(Addtional reporting by Aaron Sheldrick in Tokyo and Henning
Gloystein and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen in Singapore; editing by David
Clarke)
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