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CHINA CONCERNS LINGER

Oil hits one-month low as hopes of supply curb fade

LONDON, April 4, 2016

Oil prices hit one-month lows as prospects of top exporters agreeing to curb chronic oversupply faded, while other commodities also lost ground as the dollar steadied after Friday's strong US data.

Shares rose in Europe and Asia and Wall Street looked set to open higher, according to index futures.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, fell as far as $38.18, its lowest since March 4, before recovering to trade down 9 cents on the day at $38.58.

Prices have fallen from highs above $100 a barrel since mid-2014 on a supply glut, troughing at $27.10 in late January. Brent topped $42.50 last month in anticipation of agreement among producers to freeze output. However, such steps look increasingly unlikely.

Last week a Saudi prince reportedly said the kingdom would only freeze output if Iran and other producers did the same. Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh was quoted as saying at the weekend that his country would increase production and exports until it reached the position it occupied before sanctions were imposed over its nuclear programme.

"Prices are coming down because of speculation Saudi Arabia will not join (the freeze deal) and that's probably what we'll see over the next three weeks - more speculation and more verbal intervention," ABN Amro chief energy economist Hans van Cleef said.

Copper prices, which are also sensitive to the value of the dollar, hit a one-month low of $4,778.50 a tonne on the US data and concern about Chinese demand before recovering to $4,813. The metal hit a four-month peak of $5,131 in mid-March.

Gold fell for the second successive day, dropping about 0.6 per cent to $1,215 an ounce.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 share index rose 0.2 per cent, led higher by defensive stocks such as utilities and healthcare. The index opened lower on a fall in telecoms stocks after the collapse on Friday of tie-up talks between Orange and Bouygues.

Britain's FTSE 100 index also rose 0.2 per cent.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan earlier rose 0.1 per cent, although many of its components were not traded due to a holiday in Greater China.

Japan's Nikkei fell 0.3 per cent, led by a fall in automakers following poor US sales figures.

The dollar rose 0.2 per cent against a basket of major currencies. It edged down to 111.61 yen but gained 0.2 per cent to $1.1361 per euro.

The impact of a report on Friday showing the US economy added 215,000 jobs last month and another showing US factory activity expanded in March for the first time in six months was offset by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen saying last week the central bank would proceed cautiously in raising rates.

"Yellen sent some very powerful messages last week so the extent of dollar strength on payrolls was limited," said BMO Capital Markets currency strategist Stephen Gallo.

TREASURY YIELDS

US Treasury yields, which rose on Friday after the economic numbers, turned lower on Monday. Ten-year yields were down 2.1 basis points at 1.77 per cent, compared with 1.79 per cent at Friday's New York close.

German 10-year bond yields, the benchmark for euro zone borrowing costs, dipped 0.4 bps to 0.14 per cent.

Some analysts expect the 10-year yields to test zero again, as they did a year ago, as the European Central Bank has increased its monthly purchases of assets, including Bunds, to 80 billion euros from 60 billion.

"The main driving force is the ECB's increased amount of public sector asset purchases and there's a very favourable supply-demand imbalance this month," RIA Capital Markets bond strategist Nick Stamenkovic said. – Reuters




Tags: Opec | Dollar | oil price | output cut |

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