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						Crude oil prices face 
						weekly decline as glut fears persist 
						
		 
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		 [July 22, 2016] 
		By Libby George 
		 
		LONDON (Reuters) - Crude futures were on 
		track for weekly losses on Friday as investors reassessed U.S. data on 
		oil stocks and excesses in oil products in Europe and Asia. 
		 
		While many expect global oversupply of oil to ease in the near term, 
		huge amounts of crude remain in vessels at sea and storage tanks on land 
		as the rebalancing takes longer than some had anticipated. 
		 
		"The narrative of a balanced oil market (in the second half of 2016) has 
		so far been an illusion," UBS oil analyst Giovanni Staunovo said. 
		 
		"Supply might actually increase in the near term with the further return 
		of disrupted production and higher Middle East production, while demand 
		growth is set to slow in emerging Asia." 
		 
		Brent crude briefly fell to a more than two-month low of less than $46 
		per barrel before rebounding to $46.30 as of 0926 GMT, 10 cents higher. 
		The contract closed 2.1 percent lower in the previous session, and is on 
		track for a decline of more than 2.5 percent for the week. 
						
		
		  
						
		U.S. West Texas Intermediate traded as low as $44.25 a barrel before 
		bouncing back to $44.74, one cent below the previous close. It ended 
		Thursday down 2.2 percent and is on track to close the week also more 
		than 2.5 percent lower. 
		 
		In the Middle East, Iraq's oil exports are set to rise in July, 
		according to loading data and an industry source, putting supply growth 
		from OPEC's second-largest producer back on track after two months of 
		decline. 
		 
		Falling prices in the United States, coupled with low shipping costs, 
		have also encouraged traders to send U.S. oil to Europe, which would add 
		to supply in the region. 
		 
		This has helped the market shake off further disruptions in Nigeria, 
		where the largest stream of crude is under force majeure and pipeline 
		attacks have cut some 700,000 barrels per day from production, according 
		to state oil firm NNPC. 
			
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			A female employee fills the tank of a car at a petrol station in 
			Cairo, Egypt, February 24, 2016. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany 
            
			
  
While U.S. production has been falling, crude inventories are at 519.5 million 
barrels, historically high for this time of year, the government's Energy 
Information Administration said this week. 
 
U.S. crude and oil product stocks rose 2.62 million barrels to an all-time high 
of 2.08 billion barrels as gasoline stocks posted a surprise summer build of 
911,000 barrels. 
 
Inventories of oil products have also been climbing in Europe and Asia, with 
gasoline stocks in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp hub at record highs and BMI 
Research warning of "brimming stockpiles" in Asia. 
 
(Additonal reporting by Keith Wallis in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson) 
				 
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