Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Oil prices hit 2018 lows on emerging supply glut

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(Singapore) REUTERS: Oil prices slumped to 2018 lows yesterday in thin but volatile trading, pulled down by concerns of an emerging global supply overhang amid a bleak economic outlook.

Even an expectatio­n that the Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) producer group will start withholdin­g supply in 2019 to rein in any glut provided little support, traders said.

Internatio­nal benchmark Brent crude oil futures hit their lowest since December 2017 at US $ 61.52 per barrel, before recovering to US $ 62.10 by 0430 GMT. That was still 50 cents, or 0.8 percent below their last close.

U.S. West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude futures slumped by more than 2 percent, to US $ 53.35 a barrel, after coming within 5 cents of an October 2017 low reached earlier in the week.

Amid the plunge, Brent and WTI price volatility has surged in November to approach levels not seen since the the market slump of 20142016 and, before that, the financial crisis of 2008-2009.

The divergence between U.S. and internatio­nal crude comes as surging North American supply is clogging the system and depressing prices there, while global markets are somewhat tighter - in part because of reduced exports from Iran due to newly imposed U.S. sanctions.

Overall, however, global oil supply has surged this year, with the top-three producers of the United States, Russia and Saudi Arabia pumping out more than a third of global consumptio­n, which stands at around 100 million barrels per day (bpd).

High production comes as the demand outlook weakens on the back of a global economic slowdown. Oil prices have plunged by around 30 percent since their last peaks in early October, as global production started to exceed consumptio­n in the fourth quarter of this year, ending a period of undersuppl­y that started in the first quarter of 2017, according to data in Refinitiv Eikon.

Adjusting to lower demand, top crude exporter Saudi Arabia said on Thursday that it may reduce supply. “We will not sell oil that customers don’t need,” Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-falih told reporters.

Saudi Arabia is pushing OPEC to cut oil supply by as much as 1.4 million bpd to prevent a supply glut.

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