Oil
hits April 2009 low, then pares loss on U.S. oil rig
data
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[January 10, 2015]
By Barani Krishnan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Global oil markets
resumed their slide on Friday, with Brent and U.S. crude hitting April
2009 lows and ending down for a seventh straight week, although prices
recovered from their lows after a sharp drop in the U.S. oil rig count.
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Benchmark Brent crude broke below $49 a barrel but closed above the
$50 support level it had clung to this week after oil services firm
Baker Hughes reported the largest drop in 24 years in the number of
U.S. oil drilling rigs.
Crude prices had barely moved in the past two sessions after
tumbling 10 percent the first two days of the week.
In Friday's early trade in New York, prices drifted about 50 cents
lower as robust U.S. jobs data for December helped limit losses.
The selling gained force about an hour to noon, pushing both Brent
and U.S. crude to an April 2009 trough. Prices retraced their losses
after the rig count issued by Baker Hughes.
"In my opinion we have not stabilized out yet," said Tariq Zahir,
managing member at Tyche Capital Advisors in Laurel Hollow in New
York. "I do think that after seven weeks of losses, you will see a
bounceback at some point, and people are waiting for that to short
into. I am."
Brent <LCOc1> settled down 85 cents at $50.11 a barrel, after
falling earlier to $48.90.
U.S. crude <CLc1> settled down 43 cents at $48.36, having hit $47.16
earlier.
For the week, Brent lost 11 percent and U.S. crude 8 percent.
Brent's premium to U.S. crude, meanwhile, fell to a near three-month
low of $1.70 a barrel. In June, before the market tumble that erased
more than 50 percent off oil prices, Brent traded nearly $10 higher
to U.S. crude.
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The number of rigs drilling for oil in the United States fell by 61
this week, the most in a week since 1991, Baker Hughes reported. The
rig count has fallen in 10 of the last 13 weeks, from a record high
of 1,609 in mid-October. The current count of 1,421 in the week to
Jan. 9 is the lowest since February.
Oil analysis firm Wood Mackenzie said in a report on Friday that
even at $40 levels, less than 2 percent of global crude production
was at risk of making losses.
"Operators may prefer to continue producing oil at a loss rather
than stop production - especially for large projects such as oil
sands and mature fields in the North Sea," Wood Mackenzie analyst
Robert Plummer added.
(Additional reporting by Ron Bousso in London and Florence Tan in
Singapore; Editing by David Gregorio, Alan Crosby, Chris Reese and
Andrea Ricci)
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