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Brent hits 11-year low as oil extends slide on glut worries

Brent has sunk more than 60% from above $100 in summer 2014
Brent has sunk more than 60% from above $100 in summer 2014

Brent crude prices hit their lowest in over 11 years today, hounded by a relentless rise in global supply that looks set to outpace demand again next year. 

Oil production is running close to record highs and, with more barrels poised to enter the market from the likes of Iran, the US and Libya, oil is set for its largest monthly percentage decline in seven years. 

While consumers have enjoyed lower fuel prices, producers have cut spending and thousands of jobs.

The world's richest exporters have been forced to revalue their currencies, sell off assets and even issue debt for the first time in years as they struggle to repair the holes in their finances. 

OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia, will stick with its year-old policy of compensating for lower prices with higher production, and shows no signs of wavering, even though every dollar lower in the oil price brings fresh pain to its poorer members.

Brent futures fell by about 2% to as low as $36.05 per barrel today, their weakest since July 2004, and were down 41 cents at $36.47 by lunchtime. 

Brent crude prices have dropped by nearly 19% this month, their steepest fall since the collapse of failed US bank Lehman Brothers in October 2008. 

US crude futures dropped 31 cents to $34.42 a barrel, their lowest since 2009. Investment bank Goldman Sachs believes it could take a drop to as little as $20 a barrel for supply to adjust to demand.

The price of oil has halved over the past year, dealing a blow to economies of oil producers such as Nigeria, which faces its worst crisis in years, or Venezuela, which has been plunged into deep recession.

Even wealthy Gulf Arab states have been hit. Last week Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain raised interest rates as they scrambled to protect their currencies. 

Reflecting the determination among the biggest producers to woo buyers at any cost, Russia now pumps oil at a post-Soviet high of over 10 million barrels per day (bpd), while OPEC output is close to record levels above 31.5 million bpd.