(A man filling his car petrol tank in a local petrol station)
Oil prices fell nearly 2 percent ahead of monthly contract expiration on
Monday, pulling back from last week's rally built on signs the global market is
starting to rebalance from chronic oversupply.
( NEW YORK (Reuters)
Brent crude futures settled down 2 percent, or
$1.06 at $51.66 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures
ended down $1.14 a barrel, or 2.4 percent, at $47.37 a barrel
ahead of the September contract's expiration on Tuesday.
Both contracts had risen 3 percent on Friday, and traders said
the day's action was marked by profit-taking.
"Oil prices are experiencing some late summer chop with low
trading volume and not much news. I think we are going to be stuck in a neutral
for the next two weeks without big moves in either direction," said Joe
McMonigle, senior energy analyst at Hedgeye.
(Petrol Tanker getting ready for a trip by an attendant)
U.S. hedge funds and money managers have reduced bets on rising
prices in recent weeks, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed on
Friday.
U.S. oil prices have been on the upswing since bottoming out
near $43 a barrel in mid-June, though the market has not been able to sustain a
rally above $50. Despite the selloff, the market remains in its recent range,
said Phil Flynn, analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago.
The world remains awash with oil despite a deal struck by some
of the world's biggest producers to rein in output. Rising U.S. production has
been a major factor keeping supply and demand from balancing.
U.S. output may soon slow, as energy companies cut rigs drilling
for oil for a second week in three, energy services firm Baker Hughes said on
Friday.
Crude stockpiles are forecast to have declined by 3.4 million
barrels for the week to Aug. 18, according to a Reuters survey, which would be
the eighth straight week of declines.
U.S. commercial crude inventories have fallen almost 13 percent
from their March peaks to 466.5 million barrels.
The oil minister of Kuwait, which is participating in OPEC-led
production cuts, said U.S. crude stocks were falling more than expected because
output cuts were taking effect.
Azerbaijan, not an OPEC member but one of the countries which
has committed to production cuts, remains committed to reducing output, the
head of state oil company SOCAR told Reuters.
Libya's National Oil Corp declared force majeure on loadings of
Sharara crude from the Zawiya oil terminal on Sunday.
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