Oil price falls to three-week low

Oil price falls to three-week low
Updated 25 May 2013
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Oil price falls to three-week low

Oil price falls to three-week low

NEW YORK: Oil fell to a three-week low in a broader commodities selloff as a decline in China’s factory activity entrenched concern about weak demand, and worries about an early scale-back in US Federal Reserve stimulus haunted markets.
China’s factory activity shrank for the first time in seven months in May, a survey showed, weighing on oil as well as copper, for which China is the world’s top consumer.
Brent crude fell $ 1.22 to $ 101.20 a barrel by 11:16 a.m. EDT (1516 GMT) after dropping to $ 100.64, the lowest since May 2.
Prices are down sharply from a 2013 high of $ 119.17 reached on Feb. 8.
US crude declined $ 1.36 to $ 92.92, paring losses after an earlier drop of over $ 2.
Sales of new US single-family homes rose 2.3 percent in April, and prices climbed to record high levels, offering strong proof the sector’s rebound trend is intact.
While signs of economic recovery would ordinarily be supportive for oil, market-watchers are interpreting news in light of how it may affect the US Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing policies that have pumped hundreds of billions of dollars into money markets, boosting many commodities, including oil.
“You can’t please these guys. Now every time we get data that’s good, it suggests we’ll get a tapering off the stimulus,” said Phil Flynn, analyst at Price Futures Group in Chicago, Illinois.
“So when we see housing data that blows away expectations, it makes us pull back a bit.”
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told a congressional committee the Fed could scale back the pace of bond purchases at one of its next few policy meetings.
Euro zone data offered little support for oil prices. While a downturn eased slightly this month, a dearth of new orders means the region’s economy is likely to contract again in the second quarter, surveys showed.
Oil also fell on Wednesday pressured by a rise in US gasoline inventories.
A weekly US Energy Information Administration report showed gasoline stocks are close to their highest level for the time of year since 1999, indicating ample supply for the summer driving season when demand rises.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries pumps more than a third of the world’s oil.
Seaborne oil exports from OPEC, excluding Angola and Ecuador, will fall by 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) in the four weeks to June 8, an analyst who estimates future shipments said.
Exports will reach 23.80 million bpd on average, compared with 23.90 million bpd in the four weeks to May 11, British consultancy Oil Movements said in its weekly estimate.