Greek
crisis pushes oil below $62 to three-week low
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[June 29, 2015]
By Simon Falush
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil fell more than $1 to
below $62 per barrel on Monday, its lowest in three weeks, as Greece
shut its banks and imposed capital controls, causing investors to flee
from riskier assets and darkening the demand outlook.
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Brent crude was down $1.66 at $61.60 a barrel by 1018 GMT (06:18
EDT). It fell to its lowest since June 5. It was heading for its
lowest closing price since April 15.
U.S. crude <CLc1> was down $1.40 at $58.23 a barrel, its lowest
since June 9.
Further weakness is likely as the situation in Greece will not be
resolved until a referendum at the weekend on whether to accept
conditions for a bailout, analysts said.
"This may be the time when we break lower and into the $50s for
Brent as we have a full week of uncertainty," said Bjarne Schieldrop,
head of commodity analysis at SEB in Oslo.
Negotiations on Iran's disputed nuclear program are also set to have
an important impact on prices during the week.
Iran is backtracking from an interim nuclear agreement with world
powers three months ago, Western officials suggested on Sunday, as
U.S. and Iranian officials said talks on a final accord would likely
run past a June 30 deadline.
Securing an agreement would end the nuclear standoff between Iran
and the West. This could eventually lead to suspending sanctions and
allow Tehran to raise crude exports, adding to an already
well-supplied world market.
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With so many uncertainties, some market participants said it may be
wise to take money off the table.
"Time to hunker down, go on holiday, step away from the market and
opt for safety first," said PVM brokers Managing Director David
Hufton.
(Additional reporting by Aaron Sheldrick in Tokyo and Keith Wallis
in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson and William Hardy)
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