* Analysts scramble to cut oil price forecasts
* Standard Chartered (L:STAN) says oil could drop to $10/barrel
(Changes byline, changes dateline from LONDON, adds quote and
background, updates prices)
By Catherine Ngai
NEW YORK, Jan 12 (Reuters) - Crude oil prices lost more than
2 percent on Tuesday, extending a relentless selloff to trade
within cents of $30 a barrel for the first time in 12 years on
concerns about fragile Chinese demand and the absence of
restraint in global production.
Shaking off early firmness, crude extended a nearly 7
percent drop from Monday. Losses for the year of almost 17
percent have been driven by too much supply, the weakening
economy of No. 2 consumer China, sliding stock markets, and a
strong dollar, which makes it more expensive for those using
other currencies to buy oil.
Analysts from some major banks have cut their 2016 oil
forecasts to as low as $10 per barrel.
Benchmark Brent crude LCOc1 fell to a low of $30.43 per
barrel, a level not traded at since April 2004. It was at
$30.65, down 90 cents, at 11:43 a.m. EDT (1643 GMT).
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude(WTI) CLc1 fell to a low
of $30.10, which was last seen in December 2003, and last
fetched $30.26, down $1.15.
Crude firmed in early trade after a deadly suicide bombing
rocked central Istanbul. Traders said support also came after
Nigeria's oil minister commented that a "couple" of Organization
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) members had
requested an emergency meeting.
But buying faded after the United Arab Emirates oil minister
said that the current OPEC strategy was working.
Instead, traders chose to focus on the growing global glut.
"The market is so relaxed with the fact that we have a huge
surplus. The momentum is too strong to the bearish side, even if
fundamentally nothing has changed." said Dominick Chirichella, a
senior partner at Energy Management Institute.
Adding to supply fears, Iraq, the second-biggest OPEC
producer, plans to export a record of around 3.63 million
barrels per day in February, said trade sources.
China's slowing economy has weighed on oil, which has shed
more than 70 percent of its value in the last 18 months.
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GRAPHIC on short positions vs WTI crude prices http://reut.rs/1ZVvTaY
GRAPHIC on U.S. dollar rise/oil price drop http://tmsnrt.rs/1ZXwlWn
GRAPHIC on WTI, Brent put options prices http://tmsnrt.rs/1ZXBJsu
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