Oil
prices fall as US reserves dip by less-than-expected
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com
11 29 07
Oil prices slumped Wednesday amid a smaller-than-expected
drawdown of US energy reserves and comments from Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Nuaimi
that eased concerns about a supply squeeze.
Crude futures had slumped Tuesday, losing more than three dollars on increasing
speculation that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries may decide
at a meeting in Abu Dhabi next week to hike production.
On Wednesday following the release of the weekly US stocks report, New York's
main contract, light sweet crude for January delivery, closed down 3.80 dollars
to 90.62 dollars a barrel.
Brent North Sea crude for January settled down 2.71 dollars at 89.71 dollars
a barrel.
Prices fell after the US Department of Energy (DoE) said US crude inventories
fell by 400,000 barrels in the week to November 23. Analysts had forecast a drop
of 1.0 million barrels.
Meanwhile stocks of distillates, which include heating fuel, shed only 100,000
barrels last week. The market forecast had been for a drop of 1.2 million.
Distillate stocks are closely watched in the run-up to the northern hemisphere
winter, when demand for heating fuel tends to soar.
The DoE added that US refinery usage jumped to 89.4 percent of capacity, up 2.4
percentage points compared with a week earlier.
"The big news is that (refinery) runs shot way up," Man Financial trader
Andy Lebow said.
Crude futures have tumbled from almost 100 dollars since last week, when New
York crude struck a record high of 99.29 dollars on concerns over tight oil supplies.
Saudi Oil Minister Al-Nuaimi insisted the world oil market was well supplied
and that high prices did not properly reflect the supply-demand situation.
"There is no relationship between the fundamentals today and the price of
oil.
There is a mismatch," the Saudi minister told reporters after delivering
a speech at an energy forum in Singapore.
"Fundamentals do not support high petroleum prices. The world market is
well supplied," he said in his speech.
Asked whether Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, would push for
an increase in production at the meeting in Abu Dhabi, Nuaimi said the cartel
would first need to see market data.
"You are trying to get a premature answer. We need to meet first, we need
to look at the data and then decide accordingly," he said.
Meanwhile OPEC president Mohammad al-Hamli announced the oil cartel would invest
more than 150 billion dollars (102 billion euros) by 2012 in more than 120 projects,
including large refineries, to expand output.
The projects are expected to raise OPEC's existing production capacity by more
than five million barrels a day, said al-Hamli, who is also the oil minister
of the United Arab Emirates.
Story from AFP
28 2056 GMT 11 07
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