Oil retreats after bull
run, on rising OPEC exports, strong dollar
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[July 05, 2017]
By Karolin Schaps
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices fell more
than 1 percent on Wednesday, ending their longest bull-run in more than
five years, as climbing OPEC exports and a stronger dollar turned
sentiment more bearish.
Benchmark Brent crude futures were down 57 cents, or 1.2 percent, at
$49.04 a barrel by 1020 GMT. Prices had climbed for eight straight
sessions to Monday.
U.S. WTI crude futures were down 63 cents, or 1.3 percent, at $46.44 a
barrel after reaching a one-month high of $47.32 earlier in the session.
"The air is getting thin for oil prices. The price increase just ran out
of steam, which is not very surprising, given the newsflow of rising
OPEC supplies," said Carsten Fritsch, senior commodity analyst at
Commerzbank.
Another analyst said the strong dollar provided less incentive to invest
in greenback-denominated commodities such as crude oil.
Oil exports by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
climbed for a second month in June, Thomson Reuters Oil Research data
showed.
OPEC exported 25.92 million barrels per day (bpd) in June, up 450,000
bpd from May and 1.9 million bpd more than a year earlier.
The rise in exports comes despite OPEC's vow to rein in production until
March 2018 and follows hot on the heels of Reuters' monthly OPEC
production survey which found output jumped to a 2017 high last month as
OPEC members Nigeria and Libya continued to pump more.
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An employee pumps petrol for clients at a petrol station in Hanoi,
Vietnam December 20, 2106. REUTERS/Kham
Nigeria and Libya are both exempt from the output pact.
The head of the International Energy Agency told Reuters that rising output from
key oil producers could hamper expectations that the oil market would rebalance
in the second half of the year.
Traders were also eyeing weekly U.S. crude inventory data, delayed by a day due
to the U.S. public holiday on Tuesday.
A Reuters poll showed analysts expected weekly crude stocks to have fallen by
2.8 million barrels. The weekly data showed a surprise rise in inventories last
week.
Underlining an expected shift in longer term oil demand, car group Volvo said on
Wednesday that from 2019 all of its new models would be fully electric or hybrid
vehicles.
(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by Jason Neely
and Edmund Blair)
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