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Markets

Oil prices fall after last week's surge

Published February 2, 2015 Updated February 2, 2015 06:16am

imageSINGAPORE: Crude oil prices fell on Monday after US unions called a refinery strike and traders cashed in on strong price gains last week when the market soared on a sharp drop in US drilling.

Despite the decline, analysts said that record open interest - the number of outstanding futures contracts - indicated that prices may have bottomed out.

Brent crude oil futures were trading at $51.60 a barrel at 0440 GMT, down $1.39, while US WTI futures were at $46.96, down $1.28 a barrel.

The declines followed a jump back from six-year lows on Friday, as a record weekly decline in US oil drilling fuelled a frenzy of short-covering.

"Oil production in the shale basins will inevitably decrease as weaker, higher-cost producers shutter their operations. This supports our view that oil prices will recover this year and average $60 per barrel for Brent," Nomura said.

While the potential drop in US oil output could lift markets in the mid-term, analysts said Monday's declines were a result of profit-taking after last week's gains, as well as rising output by OPEC that was offsetting lower US drilling.

Asian oil markets also opened to news of a strike at US refineries, potentially denting crude demand in coming days.

The United Steelworkers union called strikes at nine US refineries on Sunday to bring about a new national agreement that covers workers at 63 refineries, accounting for two-thirds of US refining capacity, said a source familiar with the union's plans. The walkouts would be the first in support of a national accord since 1980.

Despite Monday's falls, the jump late last week means that oil prices ended a run of range-bound trading within clear trendlines in January, following steep falls in 2014.

Along with returned volatility, Brent's Intercontinental Exchange open interest rose to a record of almost 1.7 million by the end of last week, in a signal that traders have taken on new positions when prices hit new lows last month.

Brent rose back above $50 per barrel for the first time since early January last Friday, and its price also jumped above its 15 exponential daily moving average (DMA) value, a key technical indicator, for the first time this year.

Copyright Reuters, 2015

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