Analysts say the fundamentals haven’t changed significantly enough to mark an end to the slide in oil prices. Reuters LONDON—Oil prices remained volatile Thursday after breaking a four-session losing streak when weekly U.S. crude inventories experienced a bigger-than-expected drop. While the relatively bullish data might be an indication that U.S. oil production is stabilizing, analysts say the fundamentals haven’t changed significantly enough to mark an end to oil’s relentless slide. Crude prices have fallen more than 50% since their peak last June as a global oversupply, fueled by the booming U.S. shale industry, met tepid demand for the commodity. Brent crude for February delivery fell 0.5% to under $51 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures exchange. On the New York Mercantile Exchange, light, sweet crude futures traded broadly flat at $48.60 a barrel. Global oil market fundamentals and sentiment remained weak and Wednesday’s mixed U.S. inventory data won’t […]