Oil
sinks again on glut as U.S. crude hits new lows
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[January 20, 2016]
By Libby George
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil futures fell further
on Wednesday, with U.S. crude touching its lowest since 2003, as a
global supply glut bumped up against bearish financial news that sparked
deeper worries over demand.
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U.S. crude oil dropped more than 4 percent in early trading, falling
to as far as $27.32 a barrel. It bounced back to trade down 70 cents
at $27.76 as of 0945 GMT (5.45 a.m. ET).
The contract settled down 96 cents, or 3.26 percent, in the previous
session.
"You need the low price to slow down shale much faster," said Bjarne
Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst with SEB in Oslo. He added
that a "very broad-based sell-off across assets and across the
world" would amplify pressure on oil prices.
"With oil being fundamentally weak, it should be moving down even
further."
Brent futures fell by 75 cents to $28.01 a barrel, after
trading as low as $27.77, not far from the 12-year trough of $27.67
hit on Monday. They settled up 21 cents, or 0.7 percent, in the
previous session.
Asian equities hit four-year lows during the day's trading, partly
as oil itself curbed investor appetite for risky assets. European
stocks also opened under downward pressure. [MKTS/GLOB]
While the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund warned
that global financial markets seemed to be overreacting to falling
oil prices and the risk of a sharp downturn in China's economy,
demand concerns were piling on to already bearish energy market
sentiment.
The International Energy Agency, which advises industrialized
countries on energy policy, warned on Tuesday that the world could
"drown in oversupply" of oil in 2016, with Iran's exports piling
into the excess.
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Markets were watching for signs that the price rout was stemming
buoyant oil production, which has poured a record amount of crude
into storage tanks worldwide.
An analyst report said Canada's oil-sands producers were now losing
money on every barrel sold, while others warned that U.S. shale
producers "were just burning cash" at current prices.
U.S. commercial crude oil stocks were forecast to have risen by 3
million barrels last week, a Reuters survey taken ahead of weekly
inventory data showed on Tuesday.
A report on stocks from the American Petroleum Institute, a U.S.
industry group, is due later on Wednesday. Official data from the
U.S. government's Energy Information Administration will be out on
Thursday, a day late due to a public holiday.
(Additional reporting by Keith Wallis in Singapore; Editing by Dale
Hudson)
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