NEW YORK: Oil prices fell  on Friday, June 17 with U.S. crude  slumping to a four-month low under $93 as a  dimmer economic outlook and  the European debt crisis drove crude to its  biggest weekly loss since  early May.
U.S. futures fell more than $3 a  barrel as momentum sellers piled  into the slide. U.S. crude's discount  to Brent widened by more than $1  to $19.90 a barrel.
Oil  broke away from familiar correlations, diving in tandem with the  dollar  and despite gains for many commodities. Some oil analysts  appeared more  pessimistic about Greece than those in the foreign exchange market, where the dollar fell by nearly 1 percent on hopes for a debt deal.
U.S.  crude futures for July settled at $93.01 a barrel, down $1.94,  or 2.04  percent, its lowest since the February 18. It traded from  $91.84 to  $95.40 Friday. U.S. crude fell below the 200-day moving  average for the  first time since September, drawing additional selling.
Brent  crude for August settled at $113.21 a barrel, dropping 81  cents, or  0.71 percent, the lowest settlement since May 24, when  front-month Brent  closed at $112.53. Trading volume was about 20  percent below the 30-day  average.
For the week, front-month  Brent fell 4.7 percent, the biggest weekly  loss since the week to May  6. Brent is up 19 percent this year, while  U.S. futures are up less than  2 percent as the European market rose to a  record premium.
"The  predominant problem here is that traders own too much oil. They  bought  too much in anticipation of market tightness and now they have  to adjust  their positions," said Tim Evans of Citi Futures Perspective.
The current July contract for U.S. crude is set to expire on Tuesday, June 21.
Prices  slumped early in the European day, and made new lows in  mid-afternoon  as a downturn in stocks following Research In Motion's (RIMM.O) disappointing results weighed.
"The  stock market and euro have come off a bit and that has added  pressure  on oil and some sell stops have been triggered. People just  continue to  be nervous about the economy," said Phillip Streible,  senior market  strategist at Lind-Waldock.
GREEK DRAMA
The  euro gained on the day as the embattled Greek prime minister  sacrificed  his finance minister to force through an unpopular austerity  plan,  while Germany and France promised to go on funding Athens.
The  euro pared those gains slightly in the afternoon when Moody's  Investors  Service said it may cut Italy's sovereign credit rating from  AA2,  citing challenges ahead for economic growth due to structural  weaknesses  and a likely rise in interest rates.
Oil's  slump broke its inverse correlation with the dollar, which has  eased to  its weakest since mid-April at just 22 percent, based on the  average of  the past 25 days.
"U.S. crude has  broken below the recent range of $95-$105 and looks  like it will  shortly tack another $5 to the downside," said Gene  McGillian, analyst  at Tradition Energy.
"The fear of  the fallout from the Greek debt crisis continues to  impact the oil  markets. Indications of a possible resolution of the  crisis have helped  pare some of oil's losses but investors worry about  the stalling pace of  U.S. economic recovery."
The  International Monetary Fund cut its estimate for U.S. gross  domestic  product. This also weighed on U.S. crude prices. The IMF now  projects an  anemic 2.5 percent growth this year and 2.7 percent in  2012.
Brent  was also under pressure from news that this week's relative  strength  for the European benchmark was drawing physical crude from far  afield,  with news that traders were offering Russian Pacific Rim ESPO  in the  Mediterranean.
Data from the  Commodity Futures Trading Commission that showed large  hedge funds and  other speculators raised their net long U.S. crude  futures and options  positions slightly in the week to June 14. -  Reuters
 
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