Oil
falls to $55 as Kuwait comments refocus on oversupply
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[March 19, 2015]
By David Sheppard
LONDON (Reuters) - Brent crude oil fell
back to $55 a barrel on Thursday after Kuwait said OPEC had no choice
but to keep production steady, refocusing the market on global
oversupply as the dollar recovered from sharp losses in the previous
session.
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Brent had rallied by more than $2 a barrel on Wednesday after the
Federal Reserve indicated it would raise U.S. interest rates slower
than previously thought, overshadowing data showing U.S. crude
stocks at a record level.
The dollar fell by its most in six years after the comments from the
Fed, boosting oil and metals priced in the greenback as they became
cheaper for holders of other currencies. But on Thursday, the dollar
snapped back by more than 1 percent.
Brent for May delivery was down 98 cents at $54.93 a barrel by 1134
GMT, having hit a low for the session of $54.87 and after rising
almost 4.5 percent on Wednesday. Brent fell from highs above $115
last June to near $45 in January.
U.S. crude for April delivery fell by $1.65 or more than 3 percent
to $43.01 a barrel, after hitting $42.91, close to a six-year low.
Its discount to Brent stood just below $10 a barrel.
Kuwait's oil minister said on Thursday he was concerned by the 50
percent drop in oil prices since June because of its impact on the
Gulf Arab state's budget, but said OPEC had no choice but to keep
output steady.
"We don’t want to lose our share in the market," Ali al-Omair told
reporters.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries decided in
November to maintain production levels even if it meant lower
prices, as the group feared fast-growing U.S. shale output
threatened its position.
While higher-cost U.S. production is expected eventually to be
slowed by the drop in price, so far output has continued to rise,
boosting crude inventories to their highest-ever level.
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U.S. crude stocks rose by a further 9.6 million barrels last week,
data from the Energy Information Administration showed, while stocks
at the U.S. benchmark contract's delivery point in Cushing, Oklahoma
hit the highest on record.
A pushback in the timing of U.S. interest rate increases could give
oil producers more breathing space for financing, Daniel Ang, an
analyst at Phillip Futures, said in a note.
"Oil producers (will be) able to expand their businesses or even
tide across this period of low prices with cheaper financing," Ang
wrote.
(Additional reporting by Jessica Jaganathan in Singapore; Editing by
Dale Hudson and Susan Thomas)
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