The Manila Times

Oil prices sink further as glut returns

- AFP

SINGAPORE: Oil prices fell further toward the $ 40 mark in Asia on Friday, extending losses to a seventh-straight day on renewed worries about a global supply glut and increased production.

The commodity has slipped nearly 20 percent since its 2016 peak above $50 in early June as the crucial US holiday driving season comes to an end and temporary disruption­s to output in Canada and Nigeria ease.

At about 6:40 a.m. local time, US benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te was down 22 cents at $40.92 a barrel while Brent fell 24 cents to $42.46.

“There is too much oil in the market, there’s an incredible amount,” Jonathan Barratt, chief Securities in Sydney, told Bloomberg News.

“Oil is in a range of $ 40 to $ 50 a barrel and prices below $ 40 a barrel are going to be a problem.”

On Wednesday the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion re - mercial crude stockpiles since May, adding that inventorie­s were 13.4 percent up on-year and gasoline stocks were 11.8 percent higher. Supplies are now at levels not seen for two decades.

Adding to downward pressure on crude is a slow but steady rise in the number of rigs coming back online in the United States. Companies were forced to shut installati­ons earlier this year as prices sank to near 13-year lows below $30.

But the rise in recent months has led them to reopen the rigs as they become more cost-effective.

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