Aug 14 (Reuters) - Oil prices declined more than 1% on Monday as concerns about China's faltering economic recovery and a stronger dollar weighed against seven weeks of gains on tightening supply from OPEC+ output cuts.
A stronger dollar pressures oil demand by making the commodity more expensive for buyers holding other currencies.
It has been singularly focused on U.S. economic optimism, to the exclusion of the increasingly stronger headwinds blowing in the eurozone and China," said Vandana Hari, founder of oil market analysis provider Vanda Insights.
"A rebalancing is overdue but it may need a reality check in the markets stateside," Hari said.
In the United States, the number of operating oil rigs held steady at 525 last week, after falling for eight weeks in a row, according to Baker Hughes weekly report.
Persons:
Vandana Hari, Hari, Tina Teng, Brent, Baker Hughes, Florence Tan, Mohi Narayan, Tom Hogue, Sonali Paul
Organizations:
Brent, West Texas, U.S, Federal, Vanda Insights, CMC, Organization of, Petroleum, International Energy Agency, Thomson
Locations:
China, OPEC, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Russian, Ukraine, United States, Singapore, New Delhi