Oil falls towards 14-month low near $101 on ample supply
Chinese economic data, which points towards slowing demand, also led to the crude's slide
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Chinese economic data, which points towards slowing demand, also led to the crude's slide
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"Fighting in Iraq has had only a very limited impact on producing and transporting facilities. At the same time, lagging European demand and the seasonal lull in Asia continue to weigh on sentiment," Kryuchenkov said.
A survey of China's factory activity showed that growth in the sector slowed to a three-month low in August, adding to concerns about economic softness that could depress oil use in the world's second-largest oil consumer.
"This is a figure which indicates that growth is likely to be reasonably moderate and any upside to current expectations about China will be possibly muted," said Ric Spooner, chief analyst at CMC Markets.
"It will be generally a negative for commodities."
The drop in Brent towards $100 has sparked talk that OPEC could consider cutting output, although delegates from the producer group have said higher seasonal demand in coming weeks was expected to support the market.
Prices would have to be lower over a sustained period before OPEC would cut output, Spooner said.
"Oil is doing what it should be doing based purely on fundamentals," said Abhishek Deshpande, lead oil analyst at French bank Natixis in London.
"I would not be surprised to see Brent touching $100 a barrel, or even slightly lower, for a brief period of time as market fundamentals are so weak right now."
In the United States, a larger-than-expected drop in crude inventories last week buoyed West Texas Intermediate and helped the September contract gain $1.59 a barrel on its last day of trade.
Societe Generale analysts said in a note that the weekly statistics were moderately bearish for products and could drive U.S. refineries to start maintenance early.
First Published: Aug 21 2014 | 10:31 PM IST