Oil
prices mixed, but high on supply fears
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
07 17 07
Oil prices ended mixed Monday, but remained near
historic highs amid frenzied speculative buying and persistent concerns over
tight US fuel supplies, traders said.
New York's main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in August,
closed up 24 cents at 74.15 dollars per barrel, and not far off highs struck
last year.
Brent North Sea crude for August delivery settled down 24 cents at 77.33 dollars,
after earlier spiking to 78.40 dollars, close to the record high of 78.64 dollars
registered early last August.
Crude futures remained generally high, "extending gains from Friday and
once again pushing above 78 dollars per barrel in London," said Sucden analyst
Michael Davies.
"Just as at the end of last week, there is a continuous inflow of fresh
speculative and fund money supporting the prices," he said.
Traders said Brent oil prices had gained support from planned maintenance work
in the North Sea, which has exacerbated fears of a supply crunch."
Traders are also focusing on tight supplies of gasoline or motor fuel in the
United States amid the peak-demand driving season, when many Americans take to
the roads for their summer holidays.
The US Department of Energy had said last week that gasoline reserves climbed
1.2 million barrels in the week ending July 6, beating forecasts of a gain of
825,000, but they were still 3.8 percent lower than a year earlier.
"US refineries are rushing to increase gasoline output during the summer
driving season," Davies said.
Prices were also underscored by ongoing geopolitical jitters in Nigeria, which
is the world's eighth biggest crude exporter and the largest producer in Africa.
Crude futures had rallied strongly last week after the International Energy Agency
raised its 2008 forecast for oil demand by 2.5 percent to 88.2 million barrels
a day.
Prices are now within close range of their historic high points.
The Brent oil price touched 78.64 on August 7, 2006, shortly after a pipeline
spill forced British energy giant BP to close production from Prudhoe Bay, which
is the biggest oil field in the United States.
And New York crude had leapt to 78.40 dollars on July 14, 2006, when violence
erupted between Israel and Lebanon, sparking fears over stability in the oil-rich
Middle East.
AFP 16 1955 GMT 07 07
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