Business World

Oil hits 7-month low on more signs of growing glut

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NEW YORK — Oil prices fell about 1% on Monday to a sevenmonth low as market players saw more signs that rising crude production in the United States, Libya and Nigeria undercut the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)-led efforts to support the market with output curbs.

“We’re seeing more tankers used for storage and more crude from West Africa and Europe being offered into the US Gulf Coast at the same time the Gulf Coast has been an exporter of light sweet crude,” said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates in Houston.

“These are all signs of an oversuppli­ed market.”

Brent futures for August fell 46 cents, or 1%, to settle at $46.91 a barrel, their lowest since Nov. 29, the day before OPEC agreed to cut output for the first six months of 2017.

US West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude futures for July dropped 54 cents, or 1.20%, to settle at $44.20 per bar- rel, the lowest close since Nov. 14. The July contract will expire on Tuesday, and August will become the front month.

Both benchmarks are down by more than 15% since late May, when producers led by OPEC extended by nine months their pledge to cut output by 1.80 million barrels per day ( bpd).

There were still almost 70,000 WTI contracts for July outstandin­g at the end of trade on Friday, which would require delivery of about 70 million barrels of oil to Cushing, Oklahoma after Tuesday’s expiration.

“Some of the pressure on Monday is because it is hard to get rid of that many contracts in just two days,” said Phil Davis, managing partner at PSW Investment­s in Woodland Park, New Jersey, noting “very few traders actually want to take physical delivery.”

Traders noted the Brent frontmonth contract was at the highest premium since late May over the same WTI contract.

OPEC supplies jumped in May as output recovered in Libya and Nigeria, two countries exempt from the production cut agreement.

Libya’s oil production has risen more than 50,000 bpd after the state oil company settled a dispute with Germany’s Wintershal­l, a Libyan source told Reuters.

Analysts said rising US crude production has fed the global glut. Data on Friday showed a record 22nd consecutiv­e week of increases in US oil rigs. Investment bank Goldman Sachs said if the US rig count holds, fourth- quarter domestic oil production would rise substantia­lly. —

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