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			 Oil prices have fallen 60 percent from their June 2014 peaks, 
			driven down by rising production, particularly U.S. shale oil, and 
			weaker-than-expected demand in Europe and Asia. 
 Rather than cutting output to try to balance the market, producers 
			from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) 
			are offering discounts to customers in an attempt to defend market 
			share.
 
 At 1032 GMT, February Brent crude was down $1.06 at $46.37 a barrel, 
			after dipping to $45.23, its lowest since March 2009.
 
 U.S. crude for February was down $1.15 at $44.92 per barrel, off an 
			intraday low of $44.21.
 
 "The market is in a bit of a panic now and the momentum is really 
			quite negative. We haven't seen any actions or comments that could 
			reduce this aggressive selling," said Ole Hansen, senior commodity 
			strategist at Saxo Bank.
 
			
			 On the contrary the United Arab Emirates' oil minister, Suhail bin 
			Mohammed al-Mazroui, said on Tuesday that OPEC's November decision 
			not to cut output had been the right one.
 "The strategy will not change," he said. By not reducing output, "we 
			are telling the market and other producers that they need to be 
			rational".
 
 Oil prices have fallen so far that the front-month February contract 
			is now trading about $7 below the July contract, encouraging traders 
			to hire tankers to store oil at sea.
 
 "Once floating storage starts, there is very little support on the 
			downside for Brent spreads," analysts at Energy Aspects said in a 
			note.
 
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			Storage plays work when traders can buy cheap oil to sell at a 
			higher price at a future date. Deflationary pressures are beginning 
			to build in both Asian and European economies as demand remains 
			weak. UK inflation dipped to a 14-year low in December.
 The downward pressure on oil prices is so large that even record 
			Chinese crude imports for December, above seven million barrels per 
			day for the first time as the world's second largest oil consumer 
			took advantage of low prices to build up its strategic reserves, 
			could not lift the market for long.
 
 Banks have slashed their oil price outlook, with analysts at Goldman 
			Sachs cutting their average forecast for Brent in 2015 to $50.40 a 
			barrel from $83.75.
 
 (Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; editing by 
			Jason Neely)
 
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