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				Forecasters including the International Energy Agency (IEA) have 
				cut 2020 oil demand estimates because of the virus. Though new 
				cases in mainland China have dipped, global experts say it is 
				too early to judge if the outbreak is being contained.
 Brent crude <LCOc1> was down $1.02 at $56.65 a barrel by 1100 
				GMT after rallying in the previous five sessions. U.S. West 
				Texas Intermediate crude <CLc1> fell 82 cents to $51.23.
 
 "Risk aversion has returned to the markets," said Commerzbank 
				analyst Carsten Fritsch.
 
 "OPEC+ has shown no sign yet of reacting to the virus-related 
				slump in demand by making additional production cuts."
 
 The virus is having a wider impact on companies and financial 
				markets. Asian shares fell and Wall Street was poised to retreat 
				on Tuesday after Apple <AAPL.O> said it would miss quarterly 
				revenue guidance owing to weakened demand in China.
 
 "This has spooked market players and triggered a sharp pullback 
				in risk assets," said Tamas Varga, of oil broker PVM, referring 
				to Apple's statement.
 
 The IEA last week said that first-quarter oil demand is likely 
				to fall by 435,000 barrels per day (bpd) from the same period 
				last year in the first quarterly decline since the financial 
				crisis in 2009.
 
 The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and 
				its allies, including Russia, have been considering further 
				production cuts to tighten supply and support prices.
 
 The group, known as OPEC+, has a pact to cut oil output by 1.7 
				million bpd until the end of March.
 
 The next OPEC+ meeting in March is set to consider an advisory 
				panel's recommendation to lower supply by a further 600,000 bpd. 
				Talks on holding an earlier meeting in February appear to have 
				made no progress, OPEC sources said.
 
 As well as OPEC+ voluntary curbs, support for prices has come 
				from involuntary losses in Libya, where output has collapsed 
				since Jan. 18 because of a blockade of ports and oilfields.
 
 (Additional reporting by Jessica Jaganathan; Editing by Barbara 
				Lewis and David Goodman)
 
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