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Oil Declines From One-Week High to Near $50 a Barrel


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Transport Topics / January 20, 2015

Oil declined from a one-week high in London and New York as Iraqi production advanced to a record, compounding a global supply surplus.

Prices slid as much as 2.2% in New York and London after their first weekly gain in two months. Iraq is pumping at an unprecedented pace of 4 million barrels a day, Oil Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi said. Oil extended losses after Chinese shares plunged the most since 2008 as regulators cracked down on margin lending.

Crude slumped almost 50% last year as the U.S. pumped oil at the fastest rate in more than three decades while the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries resisted calls to cut supply. Iraq’s oil production rose to a 35-year high in December and could break more records in the coming months, according to the International Energy Agency.

“With supply exceeding demand, it still seems highly likely that the market will fall further,” Christopher Bellew, senior broker at Jefferies International Ltd. in London, said by e-mail. “Rallies above $50 have proved very short-lived, and my expectation is for the price to move in a sideways range until the next move to the downside, which I expect to take the price to $40 or lower.”

Brent for March settlement slid as much as $1.12 to $49.05 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. It gained 3.9% to $50.17 on Jan. 16, the highest settlement since Jan. 8. The European benchmark crude was at a premium of $1.05 to WTI for the same month.

West Texas Intermediate for February delivery, which expires Jan. 20, dropped as much as $1.07 to $47.62 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The more active March future fell as much as $1.08 to $48.05. The volume of all futures traded was 66% below the 100-day average for the time of day. Prices rose 0.7% last week.

Iraq plans to increase crude exports to 3.3 million barrels a day this year, including sales from the semiautonomous Kurdish region in the north, Abdul Mahdi said. The OPEC producer exported 2.94 million barrels a day in December, the most since the 1980s, Oil Ministry spokesman Asim Jihad said Jan. 2.

In Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s biggest producer, oil exports rose to a seven-month high in November, when it led the group to keep its production quota unchanged. Overseas shipments climbed to 7.3 million barrels a day from 6.9 million in October, according to data on the website of the Joint Organisations Data Initiative.

OPEC, which supplies about 40% of the world’s oil, maintained its collective target of 30 million barrels a day at a meeting Nov. 27. The 12-member group pumped 30.2 million a day in December, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg News.

U.S. producers idled a record number of drilling rigs during the past six weeks, according to data from Baker Hughes Inc

. on Jan. 16. The number of operating oil rigs in the United States has declined by 209 since Dec. 5, the data show. The count was down 55 in the week ended Jan. 16 to 1,366.

U.S. output rose to 9.19 million barrels a day through Jan. 9, the fastest pace in weekly records dating to January 1983, data from the Energy Information Administration show.

Diesel drops below $3 for first time since 2010

Commercial Carrier Journal (CCJ) / January 20, 2015

The national average price for a gallon of on-highway diesel fell below the $3 mark for the first time since September 2010 and its lowest point since the week ended Sept. 6, 2010, according to numbers released Jan. 19 by the Department of Energy.

The U.S. average at-pump price for diesel dropped 12 cents in the week ended Jan. 19 to $2.933 a gallon, according to the DOE. The price is now down 94 cents from the same week last year and has fallen nearly 70 cents since the beginning of December.

All regions in the U.S. saw big drops, too, led by a 15.2-cent decline in the West Coast less California region. The Rocky Mountain regional average dropped 14.3 cents, the second biggest drop.

The California subregion had the country’s most expensive diesel, $3.165 a gallon, followed by the Central Atlantic’s $3.131.

The West Coast less California region had the country’s cheapest diesel, $2.826, followed by the Gulf Coast’s $2.843 and the Rocky Mountains’ $2.884.

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