Oil fell 5 percent to its lowest in nearly six years on Monday, extending the second-deepest rout on record, after Goldman Sachs warned that prices would fall further and Gulf oil producers showed no sign of cutting output. An unusual spate of major refinery glitches across the U.S. East and Midwest added to the concerns, threatening to accelerate a buildup of surplus crude. Brent LCOc1 fell $2.68, or more than 5 percent, to settle at $47.43 a barrel, its third-largest one-day decline since 2011 and its lowest close since March 2009. The decline was the 10th in the past 12 sessions. U.S. crude CLc1 settled down $2.29 at $46.07, leading losses across the complex. Gasoline RBc1 and ultra-low sulphur diesel (ULSD) HOc1 futures fell by around 3 percent as refinery outages spurred some prompt buying. “I figured we’d see $40 in the near term, but […]