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						Oil falls as oversupply 
						concerns return to center stage 
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		 [July 01, 2016] 
		By Karolin Schaps 
			LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices eased on 
			Friday as the market's focus returned to oversupply as production 
			from Nigeria and Canada revived, and OPEC output reached a record 
			high in June.
 Despite Friday's losses, oil prices were on track for the first 
			weekly gain in three weeks after a bullish run this week on strong 
			buying following Britain's vote in favor of leaving the European 
			Union.
 
 Global benchmark Brent crude futures were down 17 cents at $49.54 a 
			barrel at 1203 GMT.
 
 U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was trading at $48.18, down 
			15 cents day on day.
 
 "Oil has settled down after the initial short covering squeeze 
			earlier in the week," said Ole Hansen, commodity strategist at Saxo 
			Bank in Copenhagen.
 
 "A rising contango indicates that the market is getting ready to 
			absorb returning supply from Nigeria and Canada."
 
			
			 
			Militant attacks in Nigeria had brought production to the lowest in 
			30 years but no new attacks have been carried out since June 16, 
			allowing production to slowly ramp up.
 In Canada, oil sands output was also gradually increasing after 
			wildfires had curtailed production. As of Wednesday, around 400,000 
			barrels per day of production were still affected in the Fort 
			McMurray area.
 
 Adding to oversupply concerns, a Reuters survey showed OPEC 
			production rose to a record high in June. Stronger supply from major 
			Middle East producers, except Iraq, underlined their focus on 
			maintaining market share.
 
 Despite growing signs of lingering oversupply, U.S. Energy Secretary 
			Ernest Moniz said on Friday he expected oil supply and demand to 
			balance by 2017.
 
			
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			A worker grabs a nozzle at a petrol station in Tehran, Iran January 
			25, 2016. REUTERS/Raheb Homavandi/TIMA 
            
			 
Analysts at Barclays took a different view, cutting their crude price forecasts 
on the back of expectations for reduced economic growth and oil demand following 
Britain's vote to leave the EU.
 The bank trimmed its Brent and WTI price forecasts for 2016 by $3 each, to $44 
and $43 a barrel.
 
 "Markets have experienced only the tip of the iceberg in terms of the impact of 
the UK's 'leave' vote," analysts said in a note.
 
 (Addition reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore, editing by William Hardy 
and David Evans)
 
				 
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