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Oil Prices Fall Below $61 a Barrel | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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SINGAPORE (AP) -Oil prices edged lower in Asian trading Wednesday on continued mild winter weather in the United States, a major consumer of heating oil and gasoline.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery dropped 13 cents to $60.92 a barrel in Asian electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange mid-afternoon in Singapore. The contract rose 2 cents to settle at $61.07 a barrel Tuesday in light electronic trading.

Brent crude contract for February delivery rose 24 cents to $60.68 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

“The warm U.S. weather is expected to depress heating fuel demand,” said Victor Shum, an analyst with Purvin & Gertz in Singapore. Temperatures in New York City on New Year’s Day hit a peak of 54 degrees, much warmer than normal.

Many analysts expect crude oil futures to stay on average above $60 a barrel this year because of robust demand growth in Asia and the Middle East, efforts by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to trim supply and market-rattling instability in energy-rich countries such as Nigeria and Iraq.

OPEC’s concerns that high global stockpiles and sluggish demand would undermine prices led it to agree on a 1.2 million barrel-a-day crude oil output cut in November and a further 500,000 barrel-a-day cut to take place Feb. 1.

“For 2007, oil pricing is likely going to be stubbornly high, with the OPEC group looking like it will want to defend a $55 floor under prices,” Shum said, adding he projected crude futures would sit in the $60-$65 a barrel range. “With ongoing geopolitical concerns such as Iran and Nigeria, the market will also tend to have buyers on the high side.”

Slower economic growth in the U.S. and a production spurt from non-OPEC countries should keep prices below the 2006 average of roughly $66 a barrel, analysts say.

A survey of energy analysts showed U.S. crude oil stocks were expected to decline for a fifth straight week in data due Thursday from the federal Energy Information Administration. The data, which will cover the week ended Dec. 22, have been delayed until Thursday because of the three-day Christmas holiday.

Crude stocks were expected to show a draw of 1.32 million barrels on average, a Dow Jones Newswires survey said, while both distillate and gasoline stocks were predicted to rise.

Distillate stocks, which include heating oil and diesel fuel, are expected to increase by an average of 220,000 barrels while gasoline inventories were seen rising by an average of 590,000 barrels.

Heating oil futures lost 0.37 cent to $1.6445 a gallon while natural gas prices fell 2.4 cents to $6.275 a gallon.