Oil
prices jump as US gasoline stocks tumble
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
04 12 07
World oil prices swung higher Wednesday after
a US government report showed gasoline stockpiles slumped last week by much more
than expected, ahead of the peak demand season for motor fuel.
Traders also kept a keen eye on major crude producer Iran, which remains in the
international spotlight over its disputed nuclear energy ambitions.
New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in May,
closed up 12 cents at 62.01 dollars per barrel after striking 62.56 dollars earlier
Wednesday.
In London, the price of Brent North Sea crude for May delivery settled up 42
cents at 67.84 dollars per barrel, retreating from 68.89 dollars in earlier deals.
The drop in gasoline inventories "was the biggest surprise in the (latest)
data and nothing else may matter all that much in the near term," Citigroup
analyst Tim Evans said.
The US Department of Energy said Wednesday that inventories of US gasoline, or
petrol, plunged by 5.5 million barrels to 199.7 million in the week to April
6. Analysts had forecast a drawdown of 1.4 million barrels.
"A surprisingly massive gasoline inventory draw is likely to push up gasoline
contract prices and prices at the pump," said Jason Schenker at Wachovia
Securities.
Gasoline stockpiles are a crucial focus for the market ahead of the so-called
US driving season that starts next month and sees many Americans hit the highways
for their holidays.
American refineries are meanwhile unable to convert enough crude into gasoline
owing to stretched production and limited refining capacity in the United States,
according to industry experts.
Aside from US stockpiles, traders tracked the headlines on Iran.
On Tuesday, the European Union had urged Tehran not to defy the United Nations,
increasing international diplomatic pressure on Tehran after its claim that it
could enrich uranium on an industrial scale.
Uranium enrichment is the key sticking point in the row between Iran and the
West because the process can also make the fissile core for an atomic bomb. Western
powers accuse Tehran of seeking to acquire nuclear arms while Tehran insists
its program is for power generation only.
Iran is the world's fourth-largest crude exporter and a key member of the Organization
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, and analysts fear that further sanctions
in the ongoing dispute over the program could disrupt oil exports.
AFP 11 1951 GMT 04 07
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