
West Texas Intermediate for delivery in August was down 18 cents, or 0.39 percent, to USD 45.40 and Brent crude for September eased 16 cents, or 0.34 percent, to USD 47.21 a barrel at around 0310 GMT. "Oil prices are being dragged lower on renewed oversupply concerns," said
IG Markets analyst Bernard Aw. "We have seen OPEC output hitting its highest in recent history, lifted by Nigeria production and more supply from gulf producers," he told AFP. "There were analyst warnings of oil reaching USD40, which weighed on sentiments," he added. Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries output climbed 300,000 barrels per day in June, close to an eight-year high of 32.73 million barrels per day, according to Energy information provider S&P Global Platts. It said this was driven by a tentative recovery in production in Nigeria and Libya, and a "steady" rise in output from Saudi Arabia and Iran. The oversupply concerns come amid falling demand, especially from China, the world's top energy consumer. S&P Global Platts said that China's apparent oil demand shrank by 2.7 percent in May from a year earlier. "The contraction in oil demand in May represented the fourth consecutive month of negative growth and was due to declines in gas oil and fuel oil demand, amid slowing economic growth," it said. "China's oil demand growth is expected to moderate significantly in 2016 as gross domestic product growth slows on the back of economic rebalancing." Over the past month, oil has fluctuated between USD 44 and USD 52 per barrel, after hitting near 13-year lows below USD 30
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