Oil
prices dive on profit-taking
AFP
NEW YORK
Petroleumworld.com
03 12 07
World oil prices slumped on Friday, retreating from hefty gains made
this week on a surprise drop in US energy inventories.
Traders were also keen to book profits ahead of a meeting in Vienna
next week of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC).
New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery
in April, fell 1.59 dollars to close at 60.05 dollars a barrel.
In London, Brent North Sea crude for April delivery sank 1.20 dollars
to settle at 61.13 dollars a barrel.
Even with the declines, prices remained near recent highs, analysts
said.
"Strong demand conditions have combined with declining supply
and the inevitable result is rising prices," Fimat analyst John
Kilduff said in New York, noting a variety of refinery outages around
the world.
In London, Sucden analyst Michael Davies said investors were "locking
in profits before the weekend after strong gains on the back of bullish
US inventories."
The US Department of Energy had revealed Wednesday that American stocks
of crude oil, distillates and gasoline fell across the board in the
week to March 2.
US crude oil inventories fell by 4.8 million barrels, compared with
market expectations for an increase of 1.8 million.
Gasoline reserves tumbled 3.8 million barrels -- more than double
the predicted fall of 1.5 million.
Distillate inventories, including heating oil and diesel, fell by
1.3 million barrels, which was less than analysts had forecast.
Following the report, crude futures bounced back from Monday's heavy
losses that came amid turmoil on world stock markets.
Steve Rowles, a Hong Kong-based analyst with CFC Seymour Securities,
said that traders remained cautious despite a recovery in equity markets.
"Some positive sentiment has returned" to the oil market,
Rowles said.
"The (risk) aversion is not as strong as a couple of days ago
... Overall, I think a more upbeat trend is back in the market for
sure, but there's still caution."
Traders' attention was turning to OPEC's upcoming production meeting
in Vienna on March 15. Analysts are not expecting any further cuts
from the powerful cartel, which produces more than a third of global
oil supplies.
"With the price above the 60 dollar level, there is no reason
for any production cuts," Rowles said.
Last November, the cartel cut its combined output by 1.2 million barrels
per day (bpd) to 26.3 million bpd in an attempt to lift sagging prices.
It then agreed another output cut of 500,000 bpd, which began on February
1.
"OPEC, still struggling to implement the 1.7 million bpd in production
cuts mandated at their last two meetings, is not expected to up that
figure when they again meet on March 15," Fimat's Kilduff said.
AFP
09 2042 GMT 03 07
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