Oil prices on Monday extended declines from the end of last week amid a wider market sell-off and a stronger dollar, with Brent crude falling to its lowest in nearly a month.

Other markets dropped as investors were spooked by Friday's payrolls report from the United States, which showed wages growing at their fastest pace in more than 8-1/2 years, fuelling inflation expectations.

Brent was down 57 cents, or 0.8 per cent, at $68.01 a barrel at 0716 GMT, after falling 1.5 per cent on Friday. Brent's weekly drop was 2.75 per cent last week.

US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude declined 47 cents to $64.98 a barrel, after dropping 0.5 per cent in the previous session. WTI fell by 1 per cent during the last week.

“Oil is caught up in this general risk-off move, not helped at the margins by a little bit of strength in the US dollar," said Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney.

Asian shares were down the most in more than a year on Monday as fears of resurgent inflation battered bonds.

Wall Street dropped last week from record highs as inflation concerns sparked speculation that central banks globally might be forced to tighten policy more aggressively.

The three major US indexes capped their worst weekly losses in two years, after closing at record highs the previous week.

“The size of the move in US equities doesn't always mean this, but usually after a move like that and particularly when it follows such a long uptrend, there is follow through selling,” Spooner said.

Rising US oil production has also helped push down oil prices, undermining attempts by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to support prices.

Data from the US government last week showed that output climbed above 10 million barrels per day in November for the first time since 1970, as shale drillers expanded operations after gains in oil prices last year.

“Over the course of the next few weeks one of the key things is going to be US production data and whether the increase in shale rigs recently is going to increase,” Spooner said.

US energy companies did add oil rigs for a second week in a row last week, energy services company Baker Hughes Inc had reported on Friday. Drillers added six oil rigs in the week to February 2, bringing the total to 765.

Hedge funds and money manager had reduced last week their bullish positions on US crude, cutting their net-long positions from a record after three weeks of increases.

The speculator group cut its combined WTI futures and options positions on New York and London exchanges by 18,365 contracts to 531,235 in the week to January 30, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission had reported on Friday.

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