Oil prices fell more than 2 percent on Friday
after Goldman Sachs and Germany’s Commerzbank both slashed their crude
forecasts, citing oversupply and concerns over China’s economy.
Joining a long list of banks cutting price projections, Goldman Sachs on Friday lowered its 2016 forecast for U.S. crude to $45 from $57, and said it saw 2016 Brent prices at $49.50, down from its earlier $62 forecast.
“The oil market is even more oversupplied than we had expected and we
forecast this surplus to persist in 2016,” Goldman said in a note
entitled “Lower for even longer”.
The U.S. bank said crude oil could fall as low as $20 a barrel, although this was not its “base case”.
Benchmark North Sea Brent LCOc1 was down $1.10 at $47.79 a barrel by 1245 GMT. U.S. crude CLc1 was down $1.25 at $44.67.
Oil prices have collapsed over the last year, taking Brent down from almost $120 a barrel in the middle of 2014 to a low of almost $42 last month.
Over-production has filled oil tanks around the world, pushing commercial and government inventories to all-time highs.
Analysts say the market is slowly rebalancing, but high stocks will weigh on prices into next year.
Germany’s Commerzbank also lowered its price forecasts on Friday, saying Brent was likely to trade at $55 by the end of this year before rising to $65 by end-2016.
“It will take time to get rid of the oversupply,” Commerzbank senior oil analyst Carsten Fritsch told Reuters Global Oil Forum.
Investors largely ignored a relatively bullish report from the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA).
The IEA said a move by the world’s big oil exporters in OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia, to defend their market share by not reducing production appeared to be working.
“Oil’s price collapse is closing down high-cost production from Eagle Ford in Texas to Russia and the North Sea,” the IEA said in its monthly report.
The agency, which advises the world’s biggest economies on energy policy, said reductions in non-OPEC oil production “may result in the loss next year of half a million barrels a day – the biggest decline in 24 years”.
But traders remained bearish.
“The oil market is looking for something a little more concrete than the forecasts,” said Harry Tchilinguirian, global head of commodity strategy at BNP Paribas.
Joining a long list of banks cutting price projections, Goldman Sachs on Friday lowered its 2016 forecast for U.S. crude to $45 from $57, and said it saw 2016 Brent prices at $49.50, down from its earlier $62 forecast.
The U.S. bank said crude oil could fall as low as $20 a barrel, although this was not its “base case”.
Benchmark North Sea Brent LCOc1 was down $1.10 at $47.79 a barrel by 1245 GMT. U.S. crude CLc1 was down $1.25 at $44.67.
Oil prices have collapsed over the last year, taking Brent down from almost $120 a barrel in the middle of 2014 to a low of almost $42 last month.
Over-production has filled oil tanks around the world, pushing commercial and government inventories to all-time highs.
Analysts say the market is slowly rebalancing, but high stocks will weigh on prices into next year.
Germany’s Commerzbank also lowered its price forecasts on Friday, saying Brent was likely to trade at $55 by the end of this year before rising to $65 by end-2016.
“It will take time to get rid of the oversupply,” Commerzbank senior oil analyst Carsten Fritsch told Reuters Global Oil Forum.
Investors largely ignored a relatively bullish report from the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA).
The IEA said a move by the world’s big oil exporters in OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia, to defend their market share by not reducing production appeared to be working.
“Oil’s price collapse is closing down high-cost production from Eagle Ford in Texas to Russia and the North Sea,” the IEA said in its monthly report.
The agency, which advises the world’s biggest economies on energy policy, said reductions in non-OPEC oil production “may result in the loss next year of half a million barrels a day – the biggest decline in 24 years”.
But traders remained bearish.
“The oil market is looking for something a little more concrete than the forecasts,” said Harry Tchilinguirian, global head of commodity strategy at BNP Paribas.
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