| June 27, 2008 Oil prices still climbing
|
LONDON (AP) - Oil prices climbed to a record above $142 a barrel
Friday as the U.S. dollar's protracted slump and falling stock
markets prompted investors to take refuge in oil.
Prices were also lifted Thursday after OPEC's president said
crude prices could rise well above $150 a barrel this year and
Libya said it may cut oil production.
Light, sweet crude for August delivery rose as high as $142.26 a
barrel before pulling back to $141.40, up $1.76 in electronic
trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by early afternoon
European time. The contract Thursday rose $5.09 to settle at a
record $139.64.
The previous trading record for a front-month contract was
$139.89, set on June 16.
The rise follows a sharp fall in U.S. stocks on Thursday and in
Asia on Friday. "We need to observe that financial flows were
leaving the equity markets as those markets are breaking below
their support levels," said analysts at Petromatrix in
Switzerland. "When money has nowhere to go, it is parked in
commodities as it is one of the few investment instruments that
actually rises the more money you pour into it."
The dollar also slipped against key currencies, as U.S. data
showed sluggish economic growth and pointed to a struggling labor
market. Oil is priced in U.S. dollars, and some investors buy oil
contracts to protect the value of their assets against accelerating
inflation when the dollar falls.
"The dollar movements caused the surge in oil pricing
and the
bullish trend remains intact," said Victor Shum, an energy analyst
with Purvin & Gertz in Singapore. "The oil market is subject to
further spikes in the coming weeks."
On Friday, the dollar was unchanged in early afternoon European
trading, with a euro buying $1.5782.
Also driving crude futures higher were remarks by Chakib Khelil,
president of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries,
who said Thursday he believes oil prices could rise to between $150
and $170 a barrel this summer. Khelil also said prices will decline
later in the year, and aren't likely to reach $200 a barrel.
Khelil joined a long list of forecasters who have made
predictions of sharply higher prices this year. Each new forecast -
such as Goldman Sachs' recent prediction that prices could rise as
high as $200 - causes a jump in prices as speculative buyers are
drawn into the market.
Meanwhile, the head of Libya's national oil company said the
country may cut crude production because the oil market is well
supplied, according to news reports.
Addison Armstrong, director of market research at Tradition
Energy in Stamford, Connecticut, said in a research note that
Shokri Ghanem, the nation's top oil official, has declined to say
when a decision would be made on whether to lower production, or
give any indication of the size of the cut under consideration.
But analysts expressed skepticism over the comments out of
Libya, saying the current level of oil prices provides an incentive
for producers not to cut output.
"I doubt that any real effort in cutting output would be
forthcoming, considering that pricing continues to hit new
records," Shum said. "There's no economic reason to cut output at
this time so it's just talk."
Oil prices have more than doubled over the past year on concerns
about rising demand in fast-growing economies such as China and
India, and supply disruptions in the Middle East and Nigeria.
Analysts have also attributed oil's rapid climb to speculative
buying, with traders jumping into the market purely on the
expectation that futures will continue to rise.
"Even though we have continued to see weakening demand in the
U.S., other markets in the developing world still show growth,"
Shum said. "The tight market has empowered speculators to invest
in oil and the oil market is subject to further spikes in the
coming weeks."
In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 6.55 cents to
$3.9489 a gallon (3.8 liters) while gasoline prices rose 4.62 cents
to $3.5575 a gallon. Natural gas futures rose 12.4 cents to $13.372
per 1,000 cubic feet.
Brent crude futures rose $1.32 to $141.15 a barrel on the ICE
Futures exchange in London.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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