Oil
falls on China data, fading prospect of OPEC action
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[February 01, 2016]
By Karolin Schaps
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil fell on Monday as
weak economic data from China, the world's largest energy consumer,
weighed on prices and an OPEC source played down talk of an emergency
meeting to stem the decline.
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China's manufacturing sector contracted at the fastest pace since
2012 in January, adding to worries about demand from the world's
second-biggest economy at a time when the market is already weighed
down by a large supply overhang.
"The weak China PMI (purchasing managers' index) is driving down
prices because China weighs on the entire commodities sector from
the demand side of the equation," said Carsten Fritsch, senior oil
analyst at Commerzbank in Frankfurt.
Brent April crude futures were down 35 cents at $35.64 a
barrel at 5.23 a.m. ET. The March Brent contract, which expired on
Friday, settled at $34.74 a barrel.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was down 57 cents at $33.05 a
barrel.
A senior OPEC source told a Saudi Arabian newspaper it was too early
to talk about an emergency meeting of the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Oil prices jumped last week after Russian energy officials said they
had received proposals from OPEC lynchpin Saudi Arabia on managing
output and were ready to talk.
"We do not expect such a cut will occur unless global growth weakens
sharply from current levels, which is not our economists' forecast,"
investment bank Goldman Sachs said in a report.
OPEC member Iran, which last month was allowed to return fully to
markets after years of sanctions, is so far unwilling to participate
in cuts.
Partly because of Iran's return, OPEC production has jumped to 32.60
million barrels per day (bpd), its highest in years, adding to a
global glut of over 1 million bpd in excess of demand, which has
pulled down oil prices 70 percent since mid-2014.
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Oil exports from OPEC member Iraq rose in January, its oil ministry
said on Monday, reaching an average of 3.285 million bpd, up from
3.215 million bpd the previous month.
However overall production from its southern fields fell last month,
slipping from a record high reached at the end of last year.
BMI Research has cut its oil price outlook for Brent to a 2016
average of $40 per barrel from $42.50 previously, and said WTI would
average $39.50.
"Counteracting oil's upside momentum in 2016 will be the weakness of
the Chinese yuan, lingering concerns over global economic growth and
the well-stocked inventories of crude and fuels," BMI said, adding
that a gradual price rise was expected in the second half of the
year.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by
Dale Hudson and Jan Harvey)
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