Worries about excess oil supply and uncertain demand combined on Monday to push oil prices lower for a second straight session.
NEW YORK: Worries about excess oil supply and uncertain
demand combined on Monday (May 2) to push oil prices lower for a second
straight session.
Reports of rising output in both Iraq and Iran slowed the
momentum that lifted oil prices to their highest level in 2016 last
week, analysts said.
Iraqi exports hit a near-record 3.36 million barrels a day
in April, Bloomberg News reported, estimating that Iran's output during
the month reached 3.5 million barrels per day, the most since December
2011.
"The petroleum markets have tipped to the downside in light
May Day holiday trade on concern that OPEC production is on the rise,"
Citi Futures analyst Tim Evans said.
Adding to the concerns, Chinese data showed factory activity slowed in April compared to the month before.
The oil price declines were appropriate because the rally in
prices over the last month has not been justified, Kyle Cooper of IAF
Advisors said. The market "is giving back a little bit of what in my
mind it shouldn't have had in the first place," he said.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for June delivery fell
US$1.14 to US$44.78 a barrel. In London, Brent North Sea oil for
delivery in July shed US$1.54 to US$45.83 a barrel.
- AFP/de
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