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The dollar and OPEC+ supply are weighing on oil prices, which is expected to drop for a third consecutive month.

The oil price was flat on Friday but headed for a third monthly decline as a strong dollar, weak China's data, and increased supply from major producers worldwide weighed.

Brent crude futures recovered some of their earlier losses and were now up 29 cents or 0.5% at $65.29 per barrel at 1303 GMT. U.S. West Texas intermediate crude was up 53 cents or 0.9% at $61.10 per barrel.

Dollar-denominated goods such as oil are more expensive because the U.S. currency is near its three-month-highs.

Sources said that Saudi Arabia may cut its crude oil price in December for Asian buyers down to multi-month lows.

The price of oil also fell after an official survey revealed that China's manufacturing activity had declined for the seventh consecutive month in October.

Brent and WTI will fall by 2.6% and 2% respectively in October, as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other major producers increase their output.

The increased supply will also help to cushion the impact on Russian oil exports, which are currently restricted by Western sanctions. These include China and India.

Brent is expected to average $67.99 a barrel by 2025, which is about 38 cents higher than last month's estimate. WTI will average $64.83, which is slightly higher than September's estimate.

People familiar with the discussions said that OPEC+ was leaning toward a modest increase in output for December. The group will meet on Sunday.

The Joint Organizations Data Initiative reported that the top crude exporter Saudi Arabia's exports reached a six-month record of 6,407 million bpd during August.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration also reported a record production of 13,6 million bpd in the last week.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that China had agreed to start the process of buying U.S. Energy. He added that an extremely large transaction could take place regarding the purchase of oil from Alaska.

Analysts are unsure whether the U.S. China trade agreement will increase Chinese demand for U.S. Energy. (Florence Tan contributed additional reporting; Susan Fenton edited the article)

(source: Reuters)