Prices held up for most of the day before sinking more than $1.00 in the final two hours of trade on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
At the close, West Texas Intermediate crude for January delivery, the US benchmark, had lost 99 cents from Wednesday to $59.95 a barrel.
In London, Brent crude for January tracked the same pattern, finishing down 56 cents to $63.68 a barrel.
"Below $60, we're crossing another line here," said James Williams, energy analyst at WTRG Economics of the WTI price.
He said that Wednesday's US stockpiles report, with a rise in levels of stored crude and refined products, just added to the selling pressure on the oversupplied global market.
"There's plenty of supply, more than plenty," he said. "Refineries are running full output, products increasing, and still an increase in crude."
"Conceivably, we could see crude going below $50 for a short period of time," he warned.
"The oil market may be oversold from a technical perspective, but it continues to lack fundamental support for a meaningful reversal to the upside," said Tim Evans of Citi Futures.
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and people of pakistan are thanking our PM for reduction in oil prices, no wonder this nation can be fooled so easily.
Bad news for the Oil Cartel .. but they have been gouging the World for a long time and it's unlikely that many have sympathy for them. Countries like Iran, Russia, Venezuela, and Saudi Arabia may have to make significant adjustments to their budgets and the consequences of those adjustments will be interesting to watch.
The price will stabilise at around USD 50/- per barrel........because then it becomes uneconomical for the American ' shale oil / fracking ' industry to invest further especially for new exploration of new deposits.