Oil prices fell in subdued Asian trade today following sustained speculation about the dim prospects for an OPEC oil production cut in the face of abundant global supplies.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude for December delivery fell 46 cents to $77.48, while Brent crude for December delivery was down 39 cents at $81.28 in late-morning trade.
“Oil prices continue to tumble on concerns over modest demand and no signs of clipping supply at OPEC,” said Desmond Chua, market analyst at CMC Markets in Singapore.
Trading volumes were thin in Asian trade with few fresh leads for dealers to track following the Veterans Day public holiday in the United States.
OPEC meet
Investors are keeping a close eye on comments by OPEC members ahead of the cartel’s next meeting in Vienna on November 27, with dissent evident in the 12-nation group on the need for a production cutback.
“I hope that (oil) prices will not reach a level where they harm (the) national economy,” Kuwaiti Oil Minister Ali al-Omair told the official KUNA news agency on Tuesday. Oil income makes up around 94 per cent of the country’s public revenues.
Omair attributed the slide in oil prices to oversupply and a weak global economy.
He said OPEC would discuss oil prices and “take appropriate decisions that serve the economic interests of its members” when they meet at the end of the month.
Production cut
A production cut by the cartel would run against its kingpin Saudi Arabia’s recent price cuts for crude exports to the US market.
The move was seen by market observers as an effort to maintain market share as it faces competition from cheaper oil from US shale fields.
Elsewhere, the US Department of Energy’s closely watched weekly report on oil inventories, normally released on Wednesdays, will be published on Thursday due to the Veterans Day holiday.
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