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			 Benchmark Brent, near $37 per barrel, traded just $1 away from those 
			lows reached last week as the primary supportive factor - an 
			expected cold snap in Europe and the United States - was forecast to 
			be short-lived. 
			 
			Front-month U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were trading 
			at $36.92 per barrel at 1144 GMT, down 95 cents, or more than 2 
			percent, from their settlement in the previous session. Brent was 
			down 75 cents at $37.04 a barrel, a decline of roughly 2 percent. 
			 
			"There is no significant improvement in the prompt fundamentals," 
			said Olivier Jakob, managing director of PetroMatrix. He warned that 
			low traded volumes into the new year made flat prices susceptible to 
			sharp movements. 
			 
			Crude prices have plunged by two-thirds since mid-2014 as soaring 
			output from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, 
			Russia and the United States created a global surplus of between 
			half a million and 2 million barrels per day. 
			
			  
			Oil exports from southern Iraq, at 3.27 million barrels per day so 
			far in December, held near a record, cementing its role as the 
			fastest source of supply growth in 2015. 
			 
			Slowing demand growth, particularly in Asia, has also weighed on 
			prices. China's energy consumption growth in 2015 was its lowest 
			since 1998, according to official news agency Xinhua. 
			 
			Fuel subsidy cuts in oil kingpin Saudi Arabia aimed at helping it 
			survive the price rout could also slow the country's own demand 
			growth next year. 
			 
			On Wednesday, International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde 
			warned that global economic growth would be "disappointing" in 2016, 
			with the prospect of rising U.S. interest rates and a slowdown in 
			China contributing to a higher risk of vulnerability. 
			
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			Forecasts that a cold spell in Europe would not last long also 
			undercut price support that had helped U.S. crude and Brent rally by 
			around 3 percent in the previous session. 
			 
			For most of the United States, a brief cold period is also not 
			expected to continue much more than a week. 
			 
			"The weather has been so much above normal that ... it will take a 
			lot of colder temperatures to really reverse the overhang," Jakob 
			said. 
			 
			Oil could draw support if U.S. Energy Information Administration 
			data later on Wednesday shows a drawdown in U.S. weekly oil stocks. 
			A Reuters poll of nine analysts estimated that crude stocks fell 2.5 
			million barrels in the week ended Dec. 25. 
			 
			The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, on Tuesday 
			reported a surprise build-up in U.S. stocks. 
			 
			(Reporting by Libby George; Editing by Mark Heinrich) 
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				reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			 
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