| 
		Oil pares early gains, trades near $57 as 
		supply glut prevails 
		 Send a link to a friend 
		[January 02, 2015] 
		By David Sheppard
 LONDON (Reuters) - Brent crude <LCOc1> 
		pared early gains to trade near $57 a barrel on Friday, as a glut of oil 
		that has halved prices since June overshadowed investors repositioning 
		at the start of the year for an eventual recovery.
 | 
			
            | 
			 Brent has fallen to its lowest since 2009 as top exporter Saudi 
			Arabia and other large Gulf producers have declined to cut 
			production in the face of fast-growing U.S. shale oil output, 
			despite pleas from other members in the Organization of the 
			Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). 
 "Nothing has changed on the supply side. Unless there are some 
			supply cuts, oil markets can't be strong at the moment," said Ken 
			Hasegawa, commodity sales manager at Tokyo's Newedge Japan.
 
 Brent crude <LCOc1> for February delivery was up 10 cents at $57.43 
			at 1130 GMT (0630 ET), more than $1 below the day's high at $58.54, 
			which was hit within 30 minutes of the open of trading. Prices 
			touched a post-2009 low of $55.81 on Wednesday.
 
 Traders said a number of buy orders would have been placed ahead of 
			the start of the new year's trading, with some willing to bet prices 
			will bounce this year as expensive oil projects are potentially 
			shuttered or canceled.
 
			
			 Markets were shut on Thursday for the New Year holiday.
 Front-month U.S. crude <CLc1> for February delivery was up 28 cents 
			a barrel from Wednesday's close at $53.55, after reaching an 
			intraday high of $55.11 shortly after the start of trading.
 
 Prices faced additional pressure on Friday on signs that output from 
			some of the world's largest oil producers continues to rise.
 
 Iraq, OPEC's second-largest producer, said December exports hit 
			their highest level since 1980, averaging 2.94 million barrels per 
			day, while output in Russia, the largest exporter outside OPEC, hit 
			a post-Soviet record high in 2014.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
             
			In Libya, a senior oil official said a major fire in an oil storage 
			tank at the North African country's largest crude export port had 
			been extinguished.
 The jump in oil prices early on Friday was also capped by surveys 
			showing weak factory activity in China and Europe in December, 
			underlining weaker growth that has slowed the rise in oil demand and 
			weighed on prices.
 
 In the United States benchmark oil prices took some support from 
			data on Wednesday showing inventories <USOILC=ECI> fell by 1.8 
			million barrels in the last week, but an increase of 2 million 
			barrels at the U.S. crude contract's delivery hub of Cushing, 
			Oklahoma kept gains in check.
 
 (Additional reporting by Meeyoung Cho in SEOUL and Jane Xie in 
			SINGAPORE; editing by Susan Thomas and Jason Neely)
 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			 |