Oil
prices surge after surprise plunge in US reserves
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
08 30 07
World
oil prices shot higher on Wednesday as traders weighed
surprisingly steep declines in US energy stockpiles
and the potential
of weaker global demand amid financial turbulence.
New York's main futures contract, light sweet crude for delivery in October,
soared 1.78 dollars to close at 73.51 dollars per barrel.
In London, the price of Brent North Sea crude for October delivery leapt 1.58
dollars to settle at 72.13 dollars per barrel.
The US Department of Energy (DoE) said American crude oil inventories plunged
3.5 million barrels in the week ended August 24.
That was nearly six times more than analysts' consensus forecast of a 600,000-barrel
drop.
The DoE also said added that US gasoline inventories dived by 3.6 million barrels,
sharper than the forecasted 2.5 million barrels.
Motor fuel inventories remain far below normal levels as refiners in the United
States have struggled to keep up during the peak demand of the holiday driving
season, which began in May and wraps up this weekend with the Labor Day holiday.
" With gasoline inventories standing at very low levels, refinery outages
plaguing the market and demand running at an all-time high, further gains are
likely," warned Barclays Capital analysts.
The dismal report drove crude prices higher a day after they had sunk, reflecting
large tumbles on world stock markets stoked by concerns over oil demand, traders
said.
" Participants refocused on supplies issues rather than on macroeconomics
problems," said Michael Fitzpatrick, an analyst at MF Global.
Traders' worries about demand in the United States, the world's biggest energy
consumer, resurfaced Tuesday after a monthly survey showed US consumer confidence
-- a key gauge of economic well-being -- fell amid a deepening housing market
crisis.
Market worries were further compounded after US Federal Reserve policymakers
agreed the housing sector will remain a drag on overall economic growth for some
time, dealers said.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) said that despite the recent financial
turbulence, oil demand is likely to remain strong and the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries cartel should increase output, according to a report
Wednesday in the British newspaper Financial Times.
The IEA's deputy executive director, William Ramsay, was quoted as saying
prices in the 70-dollar range were "too high.
IEA head Claude Mandil told the specialist Arab Oil and Gas review, meanwhile,
that "more crude oil is needed, therefore, but unfortunately the signals
being sent out by OPEC do not leave us much hope in that regard."
OPEC meets on September 11 in Vienna but dealers do not expect the cartel, which
supplies roughly 40 percent of global demand, to adjust its output ceiling.
AFP 29 1941 GMT 08 07
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