Oil prices fall after U.S. unions call refinery strikeFebruary 2, 2015 - 07:51 AMT PanARMENIAN.Net - Crude oil prices fell early on Monday, Feb 2, after U.S. unions called a refinery strike and traders cashed in on strong price gains last week when the market soared more than 8 percent on a sharp drop in U.S. drilling, Reuters reported. Brent crude oil futures were trading at $51.45 a barrel at 0240 GMT, while U.S. WTI futures were at $46.73 - both down over $1.50 per barrel. The declines followed a jump back from six-year lows on Friday, as a record weekly decline in U.S. oil drilling fueled a frenzy of short-covering. "Oil production in the shale basins will inevitably decrease as weaker, higher-cost producers shutter their operations. This supports our view that oil prices will recover this year and average $60 per barrel for Brent," Nomura said on Monday. While the potential drop in U.S. oil output could lift markets in the mid-term, analysts said Monday's declines were a result of profit-taking after last week's gains, as well as rising output by OPEC that was offsetting the U.S. drilling cuts. "Announcements of cuts to exploration and production budgets by some oil producers supported sentiment. However, reports suggest OPEC production rose ... in January, led by supply gains in Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Angola," ANZ bank said in a note. Asian oil markets also opened to news of a strike at U.S. refineries, potentially denting crude demand in coming days. The United Steelworkers union called strikes at nine U.S. refineries on Sunday to bring about a new national agreement that covers workers at 63 refineries, accounting for two-thirds of U.S. refining capacity, said a source familiar with the union's plans. The walkouts would be the first in support of a national accord since 1980. Despite Monday's falls, the jump late last week means that oil prices ended a run of range-bound trading following earlier steep falls. International Brent benchmarks rose back above $50 per barrel for the first since early January, and they also jumped above its 15 exponential daily moving average (DMA) value, a key technical indicator, for the first time this year. Analysts said that Monday's falls were driven by technical factors. Brent oil may break support at $51.72 per barrel and drop to $50.93, as indicated by its wave pattern and a Fibonacci projection analysis, said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao. Top stories Yerevan has dismissed Turkey’s demand to shut down the Armenian nuclear power plant as “inappropriate”. Armenia will loan 2.9 billion drams to Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh), according to a draft government decision. The Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources of Azerbaijan has “strongly condemned” Armenia’s decision. Kerobyan has said that for the first time in the history of Armenia, the volume of foreign direct investments amounted to about $1 billion. Partner news | Scholz hopes Armenia-Azerbaijan peace treaty will be signed this year German Chancellor Olaf Scholz hopes that a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan will be signed this year. Ucom equips four bus stops in Ijevan with free Wi-Fi Ucom now provides free Wi-Fi coverage in smart bus stops in four communities of Ijevan. Armenians stage more campaigns against territorial concessions to Azerbaijan Protesters blocked more roads across Armenia on Friday, April 26 in continuing attempts to scuttle territorial concessions to Azerbaijan. Czech-Armenian military cooperation discussed in Yerevan A delegation led by the Director General for the Industrial Cooperation Division of the Ministry of Defence of the Czech Republic visited Armenia. |