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RTRS: Oil falls to $56 after G20 summit
 
By Fayen Wong

PERTH (Reuters) - Oil fell over $1 to hover below $56 a barrel on Monday, near its lowest in almost two years after a meeting of the Group of 20 major economies ended with few actual proposals on how they would combat a global recession.

News that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) may wait until its meeting on December 17, instead of the end of November, to make a decision on whether to cut production targets again also weighed on prices.

U.S. light crude for December delivery fell $1.16 to $55.88 a barrel by 0533 GMT, after having fallen earlier to $55.60. This was just off the $54.67 a barrel low it hit on Thursday, which was its weakest since January 2007.

London Brent crude fell 55 cents to $53.69.

"G20 leaders may have urged fast action to deal with the global financial crisis, but concern over the weakened international economic outlook still weighs heavily," said David Moore, a commodities strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Governments from Washington to Beijing agreed on Saturday to a raft of fiscal and monetary steps to rescue the global economy but it was left to individual governments to tailor their responses to their particular circumstances and troubled industries.

Although the package of economic rescue measures agreed by the G20 countries sought to settle volatile markets and calm consumer anxieties about leaders' ability to work together, the proposals did little to alleviate investors' fears.

Oil shrugged off a fall in the U.S. dollar and a recovery in Asian stocks, which saw a 3 percent surge in Japan's equity market, despite data showing the world's second-biggest economy was in recession.

RECESSION

The worst financial crisis since the 1930s has pushed a growing number of countries into recession, heightening fears of a sharp slowdown in near-term world energy demand and accelerating oil's tumble from its July peak of over $147.

Japan, the world's second-biggest economy, shrank 0.1 percent in the third quarter, marking its first recession for the first time in seven years [ID:nT366159] and following other industrialized economies -- including Italy, Germany, Hong Kong and Singapore -- into recession as exports are hit by weakening global demand.

Oil fell over 2 percent on Friday after news of a euro zone recession and data showing a record decline in U.S. retail sales stirred concerns of a further drop in fuel demand.

OPEC may have to wait until December to take action to reach a preferred oil price range of between $70-$90 a barrel because the effect of its latest cut is not yet clear, the group's president said on Sunday.

Chakib Khelil told a press conference that he saw a meeting of OPEC ministers in Cairo on November 29 as more of a brainstorming session that might formulate recommendations for action at OPEC's gathering in Algeria on December 17.

The continuing fall in the oil price has prompted several OPEC members to call for a further cut in production as they face reduced revenues and a struggle to finance domestic projects.
Source