Prices initially rose in early Asian trade but then dipped as the return to growth in Japan in the October-December quarter was weaker than expected, while a drop in the number of rigs drilling in the US did not change the view that oil markets remained oversupplied.
In Japan, household and corporate spending disappointed, underlining the challenge premier Shinzo Abe faces in shaking off decades of stagnation.
Benchmark Brent crude futures were trading at $61.29 per barrel early on Monday, down 23 cents since their last settlement. US WTI crude was down 20 cents at $52.58 a barrel.
The dip was also a reaction to strong gains made last week when oil markets rose strongly after another drop in the US rig count, pushing Brent back above $60 a barrel for the first time since December.
Despite the price rises of the past two weeks, analysts say significant oversupply remains in oil markets as output stays high while demand is relatively low.
“We continue to believe that neither supply nor demand will respond materially near-term. On our estimates, global supply is running 1.4 million barrels per day above global demand in 1H15, up from 0.9 in 4Q14,” Bank of America Merrill Lynch said late on Friday in a statement.
“Thus inventory dynamics could continue to deteriorate in coming weeks, leading to downside pressure on near-dated contracts. We reiterate our view that Brent will trade below $40 per barrel over the next two months,” it added.
Prices initially rose in early Asian trade but then dipped as the return to growth in Japan in the October-December quarter was weaker than expected, while a drop in the number of rigs drilling in the US did not change the view that oil markets remained oversupplied.
In Japan, household and corporate spending disappointed, underlining the challenge premier Shinzo Abe faces in shaking off decades of stagnation.
Benchmark Brent crude futures were trading at $61.29 per barrel early on Monday, down 23 cents since their last settlement. US WTI crude was down 20 cents at $52.58 a barrel.
The dip was also a reaction to strong gains made last week when oil markets rose strongly after another drop in the US rig count, pushing Brent back above $60 a barrel for the first time since December.
Despite the price rises of the past two weeks, analysts say significant oversupply remains in oil markets as output stays high while demand is relatively low.
“We continue to believe that neither supply nor demand will respond materially near-term. On our estimates, global supply is running 1.4 million barrels per day above global demand in 1H15, up from 0.9 in 4Q14,” Bank of America Merrill Lynch said late on Friday in a statement.
“Thus inventory dynamics could continue to deteriorate in coming weeks, leading to downside pressure on near-dated contracts. We reiterate our view that Brent will trade below $40 per barrel over the next two months,” it added.