Oil falls $2 to 5-month low
By Matthew Robinson
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices fell to a fresh five-month low on Friday on flagging demand in the United States and other consumer nations, extending crude's losses to 8 percent this week.
The market shrugged off continued production problems in the United States in the wake of Hurricane Gustav, which left some 23 percent of the nation's crude production and 6 percent of its refining idled and in slow recovery.
"The economy in the United States and Europe is turning bad and people realize that the growth in the economies of China, India and Brazil will not be enough to offset what looks like a world economic contraction," said Kyle Cooper, director of research at IAF Advisors in Houston.
U.S. crude traded down $1.66 to settle at $106.23 a barrel, the lowest level since April 4. London Brent crude fell $2.21 to $104.09.
U.S. oil demand over the past four weeks has been running about 3.5 percent below a year ago and gasoline consumption appears on track for its first annual decline since the early 1980s, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Further fuelling worries about the economy, U.S. data on Friday showed the unemployment rate rising to 6.1 percent, the highest level in nearly five years, as the country suffers from a banking crisis.
Oil prices have been on a steep downtrend since hitting a record over $147 a barrel in mid-July, raising the possibility that OPEC will cut production when it meets next week in Vienna to stem the slide.
Iran's OPEC governor said an oil price of $100 per barrel was "appropriate" in current conditions, the Oil Ministry's news agency Shana reported on Friday. Continued...


UK
US