Today.Az » Business » Oil prices go down
10 June 2016 [16:15] - Today.Az
/By Azernews/ By Fatma Babayeva Oil prices experienced a slight decrease on the world market on June 10. The Price of August futures of Brent crude fell by 1.08 percent to $51.39 a barrel in London ICE on June 10 [4:12], while July futures of WTI crude saw a decrease of 1.07 percent to $50.02 a barrel in NYMEX on the same day [4:11 am]. A barrel of Azeri LT CIF produced at the Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli block of oil and gas fields cost $52.20 at the Italian port of Augusta on June 10, which is $0,17 or 0,32% less compared to the previous day. Meanwhile, OPEC’s oil basket price is only moving upward since the beginning of June by reaching at $48.02 on June 9. The recent rise in oil prices was related to the decline in the U.S stocks of crude oil three weeks in a row and supply disruptions in several oil producing countries like Nigeria, Canada and Libya. Various international agencies and consultation companies expect average Brent price to a bit exceed $44 a barrel this year. Regarding the next year, the figure will go up to $55-56 a barrel, they say. In the meantime, average WTI prices will amount to $43 and $45 a barrel in 2016 and 2017, respectively. Nevertheless, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) makes pessimistic forecasts for average prices of crude benchmarks to stand at $36 a barrel in 2016 and $42 a barrel in 2017. Goldman Sachs forecasts average Brent prices to equal to $50 a barrel during the second of the current year. The World Bank forecasts that the average crude price will be $41 a barrel in 2016 and $50 a barrel in 2017. The U.S. Energy Information Administration projected Brent prices to amount $43.03 a barrel and $51.82 a barrel respectively in 2016 and 2017, while expecting WTI prices to amount to $42.83 and $52.82 for the same period. Furthermore, JP Morgan forecasted Brent prices to total $45.3 a barrel and WTI prices at $44.66 a barrel in 2016, whilst expecting them to around $55 in 2017. Citigroup estimates Brent prices to equal $47 a barrel in 2016. Climbing USD value is also having a downward pressure on oil prices currently. Increasing oil prices also stimulates oil rigs of the U.S to come back online which could oversupply the market again.
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