TODAY.AZ / World news

US oil plunges more than 2 percent on supply glut woes

23 November 2015 [10:30] - TODAY.AZ
Crude futures lost ground in early Asian trading on Monday, with US oil plunging more than 2 percent, pressured by a global supply surplus despite a cut in the number of US rigs for an eleventh week out of 12, Reuters reported.

US crude's West Texas Intermediate (WTI) January contract CLc1 had dropped 91 cents, or 2.17 percent, to $40.99 a barrel by 02:15 GMT. That was near levels seen on Friday before the US crude December contract expired.

Benchmark front-month Brent futures for January LCOc1 fell 60 cents, or 1.34 percent, to $44.06 a barrel, after ending up 48 cents at $44.66 a barrel on Friday.

"The burden of carrying high US crude oil inventories is large," Kang Yoo-jin, commodities analyst at NH Investment and Securities in Seoul, said in a note on Monday.

"The markets would likely rebound only if they saw a fall in US crude inventories, while declining US crude output and seasonal demand provide some support to oil at low prices."

Venezuela's oil minister said on Sunday that OPEC cannot allow an oil price war and must take action to stabilize the crude market soon. When asked how low oil prices could go in 2016 if OPEC doesn't change its policy, he said: "Mid-20s."

BMI Research, part of the Fitch ratings agency, said: "What is underway now is a structural market rebalancing in which low oil prices clear out high cost production - a relatively small part of which is US shale. It is not the result of OPEC policy, but of the basics of supply and demand."

US crude was briefly supported on Friday as US drillers removed 10 oil rigs in the week ended Nov. 20, the biggest weekly decline since late October, bringing the total rig count down to 564, oil services company Baker Hughes Inc (BHI.N) said in its closely followed report.

US crude's December futures CLZ5 which expired on Friday ended 15 cents down at $40.39 after hitting a low of $38.99, the cheapest since Aug. 27.

Markets were keeping an eye on developing geopolitical tensions in the oil-producing Middle East as Jordan's King Abdullah, a US ally, will hold talks in Moscow on Tuesday with Russian President Vladimir Putin on how to tackle "terror groups" led by Islamic State in Syria, an official source said.

Meanwhile, Algeria's energy earnings are forecast to fall to $26.4 billion next year after low oil prices cut into the OPEC nation's economy, Finance Minister Abderrahmane Benkhalfa said on Sunday.

URL: http://www.today.az/news/regions/145366.html

Print version

Views: 1367

Connect with us. Get latest news and updates.

Recommend news to friend

  • Your name:
  • Your e-mail:
  • Friend's name:
  • Friend's e-mail: