Oil prices hit multi-year lows as OPEC decision weighs

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for January delivery dipped $1.65 in afternoon Asian trading to $64.50, its lowest intraday level since July 2009.

Brent crude for January sank $1.76 to $68.39, to stay below the psychologically important $70 level. It had touched $67.90 earlier Monday, its lowest since February 2010.

“Negative actions in the oil market are continuing today. Investors see crude as remaining vulnerable after last week’s OPEC announcement,” Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney, told AFP.

“We have not yet seen any piece of news or development that could trigger a bottoming-out phase in oil prices,” he added.

The unabated price plunge comes after the 12-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) opted Thursday to keep its collective output ceiling at 30 million barrels per day, where it has stood for three years.

OPEC ignored calls for a cut that have grown as oversupply and weak demand have wiped more than a third off prices since June. Analysts warn of further falls to come.

“OPEC’s decision leaves demand and supply rebalancing to the market,” banking group ANZ said in a commentary.

China data ‘not helping’

The news dragged WTI down $7.54 in New York on Friday, compared with the settlement price on Wednesday, to end at $66.15 a barrel. US floor trading was closed Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Brent had settled at $70.15 on Friday, down $2.43 from Thursday’s close.

OPEC has come under pressure from its poorer members, including Venezuela and Ecuador, to trim production as slumping prices have eaten into government revenues and raised fears over their economies.

But the group’s powerful Gulf members, led by kingpin Saudi Arabia, resisted the calls unless they are guaranteed market share — particularly in the United States, where rising production of shale oil has contributed to the global glut.

McCarthy said weak Chinese manufacturing data early Monday was “doing nothing to help oil prices”.

The official purchasing managers’ index for the manufacturing sector in the world’s second-biggest economy skidded to an eight-month low of 50.3 in November, from 50.8 in October.

It was the weakest reading since a similar 50.3 reading in March.

A reading above 50 indicates growth, while anything below points to contraction.

Tumbling energy prices scalped energy firms, but stocks of airlines — which count fuel as their major expense — soared.

Among the biggest losers were Sydney-listed Santos, which fell almost 10 percent in the afternoon, while BHP Billiton lost 6.75 percent and Woodside shed 4.34 percent. In Hong Kong PetroChina was 5.39 percent lower and CNOOC fell 4.59 percent.

In Tokyo Japan Airlines added 4.01 percent and rival ANA gained 3.76 percent, while in Hong Kong Cathay Pacific rose 3.86 percent and Korean Airlines in Seoul was up 6.43 percent.

Singapore Airlines bucked the trend, trading 0.19 percent lower. (AFP)

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