Crude Oil Falls Under $100

 | Jul 31, 2014 06:19AM ET

U.S. crude oil fell under $100 on Wednesday putting the contract on course for its steepest monthly slide in nine months, as concerns over weak demand rose while fears over supply shortages in the Middle East and North Africa waned. U.S. crude stockpiles fell more than forecast last week, while gasoline and distillate inventories rose less than expected. OPEC’s oil production rose in July from June, as a fragile recovery in Libyan supply outweighed fighting in Iraq and reduced output from Angola. U.S. crude oil exports reached 288,000 barrels per day in May, the highest levels since April 1999, data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed on Wednesday. Crude oil is trading at 99.61 this morning down 67 cents. Brent oil added 20 cents after its steep decline yesterday to trade at 106.27.

Oil prices decline on both sides of the Atlantic with WTI oil prices declining by 0.7 percent and Brent crude oil declining by 0.5 percent on excess supplies in Europe and Asia while U.S. crude followed suit.