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						Oil falls below $60 a barrel as inventories stay high
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		 [December 13, 2018]   
		By Christopher Johnson 
 LONDON (Reuters) - The oil price fell below 
		$60 a barrel on Thursday, under pressure from high global inventories 
		and a smaller-than-expected drawdown in U.S. crude stockpiles.
 
 "The energy complex is drifting lower as sellers continue to bask in the 
		bearish afterglow of yesterday's (U.S.) stats," PVM Oil analyst Stephen 
		Brennock said.
 
 Benchmark North Sea Brent crude oil <LCOc1> was down 60 cents at $59.55 
		per barrel by 1210 GMT. U.S. light crude <CLc1> was 60 cents lower at 
		$50.55.
 
 Global oil supply has outstripped demand over the last six months, 
		inflating inventories and pushing crude oil to its lowest in more than a 
		year at the end of November.
 
 U.S. crude inventories <USOILC=ECI> fell by 1.2 million barrels in the 
		week to Dec. 7, disappointing some investors who had expected a decrease 
		of 3 million barrels. [EIA/S]
 
		
		 
		The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other big 
		producers, including Russia, said last week they would try to trim 
		surplus supply, agreeing to cut production by a total of 1.2 million 
		barrels per day (bpd).
 That should be enough to give the market a supply deficit by the second 
		quarter of next year, if OPEC and the other large producers stick to 
		their deal, the International Energy Agency said in its monthly Oil 
		Market Report on Thursday. [IEA/M]
 
		
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			Pumpjacks are seen against the setting sun at the Daqing oil field 
			in Heilongjiang province, China December 7, 2018. Picture taken 
			December 7, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer 
            
			 
Oil demand growth is slowing, OPEC says.
 OPEC said on Wednesday that demand for its crude in 2019 would fall to 31.44 
million bpd, 100,000 bpd less than predicted last month and 1.53 million bpd 
less than it currently produces.
 
 A combination of factors such as production cuts and output losses elsewhere are 
likely to keep markets tight in the first half of next year, Jefferies analyst 
Jason Gammel said.
 
 "But... U.S. (production) growth will almost inevitably re-accelerate in 2H19 as 
incremental pipeline capacity is installed in the Permian Basin. This means that 
by early 2020 the market could move back into oversupply," Gammel added.
 
 The United States, where crude production <C-OUT-T-EIA> has hit a record 11.7 
million bpd, is set to end 2018 as the world's top oil producer, ahead of Russia 
and Saudi Arabia.
 
 In a sign that China wants to lower trade tensions with the United States, the 
country made its first major U.S. soybean purchases in more than six months on 
Wednesday. Investors breathed a sigh of relief across broader stock markets.
 
 (Reporting by Christopher Johnson in London and Koustav Samanta in Singapore; 
Editing by Elaine Hardcastle and Susan Fenton)
 
				 
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