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Oil prices steady in Asia


AFP
SINGAPORE
Petroleumworld.com 08 09 06

Oil prices were steady in Asian hours Wednesday after the US Federal Reserve halted its long-running rate increases amid slowing economic growth and the market awaited the release of US energy inventories, dealers said.

At 2:30 pm (0630 GMT), New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in September, was down one cent to 76.30 dollars a barrel from its close of 76.31 in the United States on Tuesday.

Brent North Sea crude for September delivery was up 10 cents to 77.65 dollars.
"The market is awaiting the US inventory report," said Dariusz Kowalczyk, a Hong Kong-based investment strategist at CFC Seymour Securities, referring to the weekly energy stockpiles data released every Wednesday by the US Department of Energy (DoE).

He said that while the market expects a reduction in crude oil and gasoline inventories, the drop should not be too steep "which should result in some more decline in oil prices after the data is released."

The decision by the US central bank's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) to stop the cycle of interest rate increases also helped push down prices.

The FOMC on Tuesday voted, with a lone dissenting voice, to keep the benchmark US cost of borrowing at 5.25 percent. It was the first time since June 2004 that the bank has left the federal funds rate unchanged.

Kowalczyk said the Fed move confirmed the US economy was slowing down, which would mean that demand in the world's biggest energy consumer should also fall and lead to a decline in oil prices.

Oil prices however remained under pressure as UK energy giant BP scrambled to fix its oil operations in Alaska and Israel pressed its offensive against Hezabollah in Lebanon as France and the United States worked to draw up a UN resolution to stop the conflict.

BP had started shutting down operations at Prudhoe Bay that will affect 400,000 barrels a day of production while it repairs corroded pipelines.

Prudhoe Bay accounts for about half of Alaska's total output and around eight percent of total production in the United States.

"BP's troubles with aging pipelines in Alaska may just be the tip of the iceberg. Many production facilities from the 1970s are now old and worn out," industry publication Energy Intelligence said on its website Wednesday.

"Rust may turn out to be as big a threat to oil markets as geopolitics."

Kowalczyk said the BP shutdown "will continue to underpin prices unless the pipelines are repaired."

Meanwhile, Israeli fighter jets waged deadly new bombing raids on swathes of Lebanon on Wednesday as the security cabinet mulled whether to widen the ground war to crush the Shiite Muslim Hezbollah.

With the conflict now in its 29th day, the UN Security Council was still scrambling to agree on a resolution to end the fighting that has now killed well over 1,000 people, most of them Lebanese civilians.

Security analysts fear the Israeli-Hezbollah conflict could drag the Middle East into a wider war and disrupt oil supplies from the region.

AFP 09 0643 GMT 08 06


Copyright ©2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.

 

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