NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil prices fell below $50 on Friday, to the lowest in 10 weeks, as traders focused on slow economic growth and expanding crude oil supplies in the United States.
U.S. light crude settled at $49.72 a barrel, down 4 percent on the day, while London Brent crude fell $1.39 to $51.09.
It was the first time since Feb. 18 that U.S. oil prices settled under $50. And oil prices fell 10 percent in the past week.
Prices have dropped 14.7 percent since the $58.28 record high for U.S. crude set April 4. OPEC has been producing near full-tilt as U.S. demand is going through its seasonal second-quarter lull. That has brought crude supplies to their highest level since mid-2002.
U.S. government data on Thursday showed the slowest rate of economic growth in two years, with the U.S. economy expanding at an annualized rate of 3.1 percent in the first quarter of 2005.
Analysts said that while supply-and-demand fundamental factors are bearish, the oil price slide Friday was also linked to technical pricing factors such as crude breaching $50.
"We broke through psychological support at $50 and many people would say they're going to sell, thinking maybe the bull market is over," said Mark Waggoner, president of Excel Futures Inc., of Huntington Beach, California.
Katherine Spector, head of energy research at JP Morgan Securities in New York, said in the past year to 18 months of escalating oil prices, there have been downward corrections every two or three months.
The key to a lower price that is sustainable and not just a short-term correction the market has experienced in the past year "is the continued availability of fresh barrels of oil and further signs of sluggish growth such as Thursday's below-expected U.S. GDP growth figure," wrote analysts at brokerage Refco.
"If recent reappraisals of the outlook for global economic growth this year continue to be downgraded, then it is possible to see oil revisit the upper-$40s. But we aren't out of the woods in terms of gasoline, given the typical seasonal peak in prices during the spring ahead of the summer driving season."
Commercial inventories in the United States, the world's biggest oil user, jumped 5.5 million barrels last week following the third-highest import flow total on record, data showed on Wednesday.
U.S. crude oil stockpiles now stand 9 percent above one year ago while gasoline inventories are running at the top end of the range for the time of year. President Bush, who met earlier this week with Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, said on Thursday that his administration would encourage oil producers to maximize output.
U.S. light crude settled at $49.72 a barrel, down 4 percent on the day, while London Brent crude fell $1.39 to $51.09.
It was the first time since Feb. 18 that U.S. oil prices settled under $50. And oil prices fell 10 percent in the past week.
Prices have dropped 14.7 percent since the $58.28 record high for U.S. crude set April 4. OPEC has been producing near full-tilt as U.S. demand is going through its seasonal second-quarter lull. That has brought crude supplies to their highest level since mid-2002.
U.S. government data on Thursday showed the slowest rate of economic growth in two years, with the U.S. economy expanding at an annualized rate of 3.1 percent in the first quarter of 2005.
Analysts said that while supply-and-demand fundamental factors are bearish, the oil price slide Friday was also linked to technical pricing factors such as crude breaching $50.
"We broke through psychological support at $50 and many people would say they're going to sell, thinking maybe the bull market is over," said Mark Waggoner, president of Excel Futures Inc., of Huntington Beach, California.
Katherine Spector, head of energy research at JP Morgan Securities in New York, said in the past year to 18 months of escalating oil prices, there have been downward corrections every two or three months.
The key to a lower price that is sustainable and not just a short-term correction the market has experienced in the past year "is the continued availability of fresh barrels of oil and further signs of sluggish growth such as Thursday's below-expected U.S. GDP growth figure," wrote analysts at brokerage Refco.
"If recent reappraisals of the outlook for global economic growth this year continue to be downgraded, then it is possible to see oil revisit the upper-$40s. But we aren't out of the woods in terms of gasoline, given the typical seasonal peak in prices during the spring ahead of the summer driving season."
Commercial inventories in the United States, the world's biggest oil user, jumped 5.5 million barrels last week following the third-highest import flow total on record, data showed on Wednesday.
U.S. crude oil stockpiles now stand 9 percent above one year ago while gasoline inventories are running at the top end of the range for the time of year. President Bush, who met earlier this week with Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, said on Thursday that his administration would encourage oil producers to maximize output.