Oil prices sink further as glut returns
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.