Oil futures dipped in early Asian trade on Monday on worries about global oversupply after a higher US rig count pointed to rising US shale production, while a stronger US dollar also put pressure on crude.
US West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell 5 cents to US$50.55 a barrel by 0012 GMT after settling 25 cents higher in the previous session.
International benchmark Brent futures slipped 11 cents to US$53.42 a barrel. The March contract closed the previous session down 13 cents at US$52.83 a barrel.
Both contracts posted their worst quarterly loss since late 2015 in the March quarter. US futures fell nearly 6 per cent from the previous quarter, while Brent lost 7 per cent as rising inventory levels outpaced output cuts by Opec and non-Opec members.
Crude oil prices staged a three-day rally last week amid expectations members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and non-members such as Russia would extend production cuts beyond June.
But prices fell on Friday after energy services firm Baker Hughes said the US rig count increased by 10 to 662 last week, making the first quarter the strongest for oil rig additions since mid-2011.
The US dollar index rose against a basket of currencies on Monday. A strong US dollar makes greenback-denominated commodities including oil more expensive for holders of other currencies.
Iraq plans to increase its oil output capacity to 5 million barrels per day before the end of the year, but Baghdad has assured Opec it will fully comply with the pact to cut oil supply, oil minister Jabar al-Luaibi and Opec secretary general Mohammed Barkindo said on Sunday.
Russian oil shipped by state pipeline monopoly Transneft to ports for export rose to 2.944 million barrels per day (bpd) in March, or 12.452 million tonnes, from 2.819 million bpd in February.
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