Oil prices fall in Asia trade

NEW YORK (APP) – New York oil prices fell in late trade on Friday (Feb 20), with the WTI contract breaking away from a stable trade in London to fall near the US$50 dollar line.

West Texas Intermediate for March delivery settled at the official close at US$50.32 a barrel, down 82 cents from Thursday, as the contract expired. WTI then continued to fall further in late trade, dropping below US$50.

In London, Brent crude for April delivery was flat at US$60.22 a barrel, one cent higher from a day earlier.
US and Canadian output continued to rise despite the weak market, adding to the gap between the two key benchmarks.
“Still-rising US production and climbing inventories remain the more relevant fundamental story,” said Timothy Evans of Citi Futures.

Analysts at JPMorgan said reports of production and export drops in the Middle East and North Africa helped hold up London prices.

“An additional support also comes from higher crude demand in Europe from strong refinery margins and US refinery maintenance allowing refiners elsewhere to fill the product supply gap,” they said.

“We continue to expect that crude markets will come under pressure in the short term, however, fundamentals point to stress on Brent-related crude outweighing that on WTI.”
More broadly, they said they foresee overall demand will decline as refineries adjust to different conditions, further pressing downward on prices.

“Assuming that Brent markets witness a reversal of the supply losses that have tightened them significantly in recent weeks, then we would expect weaker Brent cash differentials and structure to erode the support for Brent crude against other benchmarks, notably WTI.”

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