Business World

Oil prices ease on signs of steady production

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NEW YORK — Oil prices were about 1% lower on Monday as investors continued to await strong indication­s that the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)-led effort to drain a glut was proving effective but output increases in some top producers eased, keeping losses in check.

Libya’s national oil production stood at 1.03 million barrels per day ( bpd), little changed from its level since the end of last month, an oil industry off icial said.

US drillers added two oil rigs in the week to July 14, bringing the total to 765, Baker Hughes said on Friday. Rig additions over the past four weeks averaged five, the slowest pace of growth since November. Still, US shale oil production was forecast to rise for the eighth consecutiv­e month, climbing 112,000 bpd to 5.585 million bpd in August.

Key technical indicators are bullish, however, with prices rising above the short-term 50-day moving averages, traders said.

Brent crude fell 49 cents, or 1%, to settle at $48.42 a barrel. US crude ended the session 52 cents, or 1.10% lower at $46.02. Prices had earlier touched their highest since July 5.

“The idea of higher production levels, particular­ly in the US, Libya and Nigeria… I think that seems to have been priced in for the moment,” said Gene McGillian, manager of market research at Tradition Energy. “I am skeptical. I think the market has bounced but it’s having trouble finding traction to move higher probably because some of the drop off in inventorie­s are likely due to gasoline demand picking up.”

A sharp drop in US crude inventorie­s in the week to July 7 supported prices last week. But crude stocks in industrial­ized nations remained high, putting a brake on the oil price rally.

“The market is not doing too much today — it feels like wait and see,” said Olivier Jakob of oil analyst Petromatri­x. “There is some rebalancin­g in products, but overall the layers of stocks are still very large.”

US gasoline margins rose to the highest since April 24 amid signs of improved demand and inventory declines, traders said.

Oil prices are less than half their mid-2014 level because of a persistent glut, even after OPEC with Russia and other non- OPEC producers cut supplies since January. —

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