Oil fell by $1.50 to near the $100 a barrel mark on Monday, extending last week's deep losses as funds sought to lock in first-quarter profits and Saudi Arabia reassured consumers of its plans to boost supply. US light crude for May delivery fell $1.51 to $100.33 a barrel in Globex electronic trading by 0100 GMT. Prices dropped by nearly $9, about 8 percent, last week as investors fled the commodities complex on fears that gains had been overdone, giving a boost to the beleaguered dollar in the process.
London Brent crude fell $1.12 cents to $99.26. "I think there's still a lot of profit taking in the market and that is pushing down oil prices. The US dollar is also bouncing back from major currencies so that's adding to the downward pressure," said Tetsu Emori, a Tokyo-based fund manager at Astmax Co Ltd. "The market could also be reacting to comments from Saudi Arabia." Saudi Arabia said on Sunday it was working to expand its oil production and refinery capacity in order to maintain world economic growth, reaffirming its vow to invest tens of billions of dollars in new wells and infrastructure. "The kingdom will work with OPEC countries, other producers and consuming countries towards oil market stability and to avoid the effects of harmful speculation," the Supreme Council of Petroleum and Mineral Affairs said in a statement following a visit by US Vice President Dick Cheney. Washington has said it wants Saudi Arabia to help raise OPEC production to ease prices, but the producers' cartel has resisted pumping more crude due to fears of weakening demand
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