UPDATE 6-Oil prices fall 3% as US hurricane risk recedes, China stimulus disappoints

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WTI leads losses, down 2.9%, as hurricane risk recedes

22% of US Gulf of Mexico oil output shut in as of Thursday

China's fiscal stimulus disappoints oil investors

New throughout, changes dateline, previous LONDON

By Shariq Khan and Robert Harvey

- Oil prices fell 3% on Friday on easing fears of prolonged supply disruptions from a hurricane in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, while China's latest economic-stimulus packages failed to impress some oil traders.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures CLc1 led the decline and were down 2.9%, or $2.07, at 70.29 per barrel by 12:06 p.m. ET (1706 GMT). Global benchmark Brent crude futures LCOc1 fell 2.5%, or $1.86, to $73.77 per barrel.

Energy producers shut in more than 22% of oil output in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico by Thursday as a precautionary measure to brace against Hurricane Rafael, helping lift oil prices by more than 1% in the prior session.

However, the latest forecasts on Rafael's trajectory and intensity reduced the risk to oil production from the U.S. Gulf.

"Threats of supply outages due to Hurricane Rafael are subsiding as the storms shifts to circling in the center of the Gulf of Mexico for the next 5 days or so," Alex Hodes, analyst at brokerage firm StoneX told clients in a note.

The storm, which left a trail of destruction in Cuba this week, had weakened to a Category 2 hurricane on Friday, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center's latest advisory.

Meanwhile, top oil importer China's latest round of fiscal support disappointed oil investors. Chinese authorities announced a package easing debt-repayment strains for local governments, but those measures do little to directly target demand, UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said.

"I guess some market participants were hoping for more stimulus measures coming from China," he said. "Hence, the disappointment weighing on prices earlier today."

Deflationary pressures on the Chinese economy have been a heavy drag on oil prices this year, with data showing a sixth-consecutive month of year-over-year declines in the country's crude oil imports for October.

"The weakening of oil imports in China is due to weaker demand for oil as a result of the sluggish economic development and rapid advance of e-mobility," said Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch.

Expectations of tighter sanctions on Iran and Venezuela by U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, which could cut oil supply to global markets, limited oil's losses. The U.S. Federal Reserve's decision to cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point on Thursday also helped keep both benchmarks on course for about 1% week-over-week gains, despite Friday's slump.

"In the short-term, oil prices might rise if the new President Trump is quick on the draw with oil sanctions," said PVM analyst John Evans.


(Reporting by Shariq Khan in New York, Robert Harvey in London
Editing by David Goodman, David Evans and Rod Nickel)

((Shariq.Khan@thomsonreuters.com; Twitter/X: @shariqrtrs; Office: (646) 261-7893;))

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