Price for US crude fell below the psychologically important
level of $40 a barrel in early trading on Tuesday. Analysts warn
oversupply could lead to a further $5 drop in the oil price.
US West Texas Intermediate
(WTI) dipped to $39.86 - its lowest level since April 20 - before
settling at $40.75 a barrel as of 14:00 GMT. The North Sea benchmark
Brent crude rose 89 cents to $43.03 per barrel.
“The world is so oversupplied and the pace of rebalance is so slow
that even geopolitical factors such as the ongoing civil strife in
Nigeria are not enough to offset the fall in prices,” said Gao Jian, an energy analyst at SCI International as cited by the Wall Street Journal.
Crude prices rallied earlier in the summer on the back of wildfires in
Canada and oil worker strikes in Kuwait. However in recent weeks, they
have come under renewed pressure due to increased US oil drilling
activities, Libya’s expected return to the export market, and the
possible output increase by OPEC members Iraq and Iran.
That made investors shift their focus back to the oversupply issues,
saying it might take longer than expected for supply and demand to
rebalance. Oversupply could bring crude back to $35 per barrel, analysts
warn.
Mike Dragosits, senior commodities strategist at TD Securities, identified $35 as a critical support level. "I
think if it got down to $35, you'd have people stepping in. The
fundamentals are a lot better than they were at the beginning of the
year," Dragosits told CNBC.
Iran's Oil Minister Bijan Namdar
Zanganeh told state television that the market was oversupplied but
predicted balance to be restored.
According to a Bloomberg poll of at least 20 analysts, the crude market may rebound to $57 per oil barrel in 2017.
“We’re
looking at a market that’s still in a very slow process of rebalancing
and we don’t think that you’ll get a sustainable deficit until the
second quarter of 2017,” said Michael Hsueh, a strategist at Deutsche Bank. “Those deficits are necessary to draw down global inventories, but that will still take until the end of 2018, it appears,” he said.
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