U.S. Oil Prices Hit Fresh Six-Year Low, Dropping Below $40 a Barrel

The price of oil in the U.S. tumbled below $40 a barrel Friday for the first time since 2009 amid a growing consensus that cheap oil is here to stay.

Oil investors and forecasters, who predicted early in the year that prices would recover in the second half of 2015, now say a rebound is unlikely before the second half of next year or 2017. U.S. government forecasters last week cut their oil-price forecasts and see oil holding below $60 a barrel, on average, through 2016.

The shift in sentiment is partly due to the resilience of U.S. oil producers, who are continuing to pump crude at near-record levels despite months of spending cuts, thanks to new efficiencies in drilling technology. An unexpected price rally in the second quarter allowed some companies to lock in profitable prices for next year and add new drilling rigs.

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