Oil falls in first day of 2019 trading as supply surges\, economy slows

Oil falls in first day of 2019 trading as supply surges, economy slows

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE 

By Gloystein

International Brent crude futures were at $53.47 per barrel at 0315 GMT, down 33 cents, or 0.6 percent, from their final close of 2018.

Intermediate (WTI) were at $45.32 per barrel, down 9 cents, or 0.2 percent.

In physical oil markets, Malaysia's set the official selling price of a basket of December-loading Malaysian crude grades at $62.79 a barrel, the lowest since October 2017, the firm said on Wednesday.

Traders said prices fell on expectations of oversupply amid surging U.S. production and concerns about a global economic slowdown.

China's factory activity contracted for the first time in 19 months in December, a private survey showed, pointing to a rocky start for the world's second-largest economy in 2019.

ended 2018 with losses for the first time since 2015, after a desultory fourth quarter that saw buyers flee the market over growing worries about a supply glut and mixed signals related to renewed U.S. sanctions on

"... registered their first yearly decline in three years on fears of a slowing global economy and concerns of an ongoing supply glut," said Adeel Minhas, a at Australia's

For the year, U.S. Intermediate crude (WTI) futures slumped nearly 25 percent, while Brent tumbled nearly 20 percent.

The outlook for 2019 is riddled with uncertainty, analysts said, including U.S.-trade concerns and Brexit, as well as political instability and conflict in the

A poll showed oil prices are expected to trade below $70 per barrel in 2019 as surplus production, much of it from the United States, and slowing economic growth undermine efforts led by the (OPEC) to cut supply and prop up prices.

On the production side, all eyes will be on the ongoing surge in U.S. output and on OPEC's and Russia's supply discipline.

"Don't underestimate shale producers and the wider U.S. in general. Too often this year the market pushed stories ... bottlenecks (pipelines, frack crews, truck drivers, etc.), yet U.S. will have grown by a massive 2+ million barrels per day between 1.1.2018 and 1.1.2019," consultancy said in an analysis of 2018.

U.S. crude output was last reported at a record 11.7 million bpd in late December 2018, making the world's biggest ahead of and

(Reporting by Gloystein; editing by Richard Pullin)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, January 02 2019. 08:56 IST