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Keyword: supplyshock

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  • Oil Prices Up on Northeastern Forecast ($57.94/bbl)

    11/14/2005 3:19:00 AM PST · by RWR8189 · 12 replies · 860+ views
    Associated Press ^ | November 14, 2005
    SINGAPORE - Crude oil futures opened the week slightly higher, briefly rising above $58 a barrel, on predictions a cold snap was headed for the northeastern United States, the world's biggest winter heating fuel market. Light, sweet crude for December delivery rose as much as 57 cents to $58.10 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, before slipping to $57.78. The contract fell to $56.93 a barrel last week before closing at $57.53 Friday. December Brent crude on London's International Petroleum Exchange was 20 cents higher at $55.19 a barrel. Friday's close was the benchmark contract's...
  • Oil Prices Fall Further Below $58 ($57.12/bbl)

    11/11/2005 2:36:41 AM PST · by RWR8189 · 34 replies · 1,106+ views
    Associated Press ^ | November 11, 2005
    SINGAPORE - Crude oil futures slipped further below $58 a barrel Friday amid reports of rising supply and falling demand. Light, sweet crude for December delivery fell 9 cents to $57.71 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange in electronic trading in Singapore. On Thursday, the contract fell to $57.80, the lowest level for the front-month contract since July 21. The U.S. Energy Information Administration released data that showed natural gas in storage grew more than expected last week, surpassing a level that many analysts believe is necessary to meet winter demand. The Paris-based International Energy Agency said in...
  • Oil Futures Hold Steady Below $60 a Barrel ($59.57/bbl)

    11/02/2005 3:09:11 AM PST · by RWR8189 · 21 replies · 665+ views
    Associated Press ^ | November 2, 2005 | Christopher Torchia
    SINGAPORE (AP) -- Crude oil prices held steady just below US$60 a barrel on Wednesday after predictions of warmer weather in the United States sparked a big drop two days earlier. Market experts said prospects for rising demand could keep prices at current levels. Light, sweet crude for December delivery gained 5 cent to US$59.90 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Tuesday, the contract rose 9 cents to settle at $59.85 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, where a day earlier they had fallen nearly US$1.50 to a level about 15 percent...
  • Oil drops, Wilma spares Gulf ($59.70/bbl)

    10/24/2005 2:59:40 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 18 replies · 1,044+ views
    Reuters ^ | October 24, 2005
    LONDON (Reuters) - Oil shed nearly a dollar on Monday, sinking below $60 after Hurricane Wilma bypassed storm-battered U.S. oil and gas facilities in the Gulf of Mexico. U.S. light crude fell as low as $59.56 a barrel, the lowest since July 28. It was down 93 cents by 0922 GMT to $59.70, reversing a gain of 61 cents on Friday on fears Wilma could hinder the recovery of oil operations in the Gulf. Prices were 16 percent below the record-high of $70.85 a barrel struck in late August in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. London Brent crude lost 96...
  • Oil drops $1, Wilma threat eases ($63.43/bbl)

    10/18/2005 4:47:33 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 3 replies · 589+ views
    Reuters ^ | October 18, 2005
    LONDON (Reuters) - Oil fell $1 a barrel on Tuesday as a threatened hurricane was expected to miss rigs and refineries in the U.S. Gulf and the world's top banker said record prices were eroding demand. U.S. crude lost 98 cents to $63.38 a barrel by 1125 GMT, after a gain of 2.8 percent on Monday. London Brent crude was $1.06 down at $59.51 a barrel. Tropical Storm Wilma gained strength in the Caribbean Sea and was expected to become a full-blown hurricane, but its path was set to shift east toward Florida and away from the heart of U.S....
  • Oil up after IEA says demand resilient ($62.30/bbl)

    10/11/2005 5:03:23 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 3 replies · 457+ views
    Reuters ^ | October 11, 2005 | Janet McBride and Peg Mackey
    LONDON (Reuters) - Oil climbed back above $62 on Tuesday after the International Energy Agency said it saw no lasting damage to demand that has pushed producers and refiners to the limit and could lead to fuel shortages this winter. There have been signs recently that persistent high prices are taking their toll on the economies of the world's big consumers. Hurricanes that battered U.S. Gulf rigs and refiners catapulted oil to new record highs, finally crimping fuel use. But the IEA, adviser to 26 industrialized nations, forecast demand growth would quicken to 1.75 million barrels per day next year...
  • Oil eases toward $62 ($62.08/bbl)

    10/06/2005 3:57:34 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 54 replies · 882+ views
    Reuters ^ | October 6, 2005 | Jiwon Chung
    TOKYO (Reuters) - Oil prices fell for a fifth day on Thursday, dipping to their lowest level in two months after U.S. government data showed a drop in oil demand in the world's largest consumer. U.S. crude futures for November slid 19 cents to $62.60 a barrel, having earlier traded as low as $62.23. London Brent crude was down 32 cents to $59.80. Oil prices have fallen sharply from their August 30 record high of $70.85 on signs that soaring costs are eroding demand, offsetting fears over tight supplies in the wake of hurricanes that toppled production platforms and shut...
  • Crude Oil Prices Slide ($64.83/bbl)

    10/04/2005 4:01:29 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 12 replies · 629+ views
    Associated Press ^ | October 4, 2005 | GILLIAN WONG
    SINGAPORE -- Oil prices slipped Tuesday after the U.S. government indicated it might release emergency stockpiles of heating oil to combat supply disruptions from recent hurricanes. But energy futures were not expected to continue their retreat for long, analysts said, because a U.S. petroleum inventories report due later in the week was likely to show that Hurricane Rita hurt supply ahead of the coming Northern Hemisphere winter. Midmorning in Singapore, light, sweet crude for November delivery fell 16 cents to $65.31 a barrel in Asian electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 77 cents to settle...
  • Oil holds above $66 ($66.60/bbl)

    09/29/2005 4:34:03 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 12 replies · 3,767+ views
    Reuters ^ | September 29, 2005 | Peg Mackey
    LONDON (Reuters) - Oil held firm above $66 a barrel on Thursday stoked by fears that hurricane-wrecked U.S. refineries would be unable to churn out ample heating fuel to warm American consumers this winter. But Europe was riding to the rescue again, booking tankers of gasoline and heating oil to move transatlantic to help prevent a full-blown fuel crisis in the world's biggest oil consumer. Strikes in France, a leading U.S. oil products supplier, meant French refiners might sit on the sidelines. U.S. crude on the New York Mercantile Exchange was up 6 cents at $66.41 a barrel by 1000...
  • Oil nears $68, Rita threatens facilities ($67.75/bbl)

    09/22/2005 3:25:54 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 2 replies · 416+ views
    Reuters ^ | September 22, 2005
    LONDON (Reuters) - Oil raced toward $68 on Thursday as Hurricane Rita bore down on Gulf of Mexico oil and gas production and forced six refineries in Texas to shut down. Companies scrambled to close facilities and evacuate staff as Rita, now a maximum Category 5 storm, aimed her 175 mph (280 kph) winds on Texas, home to a quarter of U.S. refining capacity. It is expected to hit land by early Saturday. "Rita will remain the market's focus ... unless it unexpectedly breaks apart. But with it being such a fierce storm we wouldn't play the short side of...
  • Oil prices up on hurricane fears, OPEC ($63.75/bbl)

    09/19/2005 3:41:44 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 32 replies · 780+ views
    Reuters ^ | September 19, 2005 | Paul Marriott
     SYDNEY (Reuters) - Oil prices climbed more than 1 percent on Monday as a new storm system appeared to be headed for the U.S. Gulf Coast, and as OPEC ministers appeared to favor leaving crude output unchanged for now.U.S. light crude rose 78 cents to $63.78 a barrel as the season's 17th tropical storm formed near the Bahamas and OPEC members leaned toward taking no immediate action on extra supply. London Brent crude jumped 93 cents to $62.74 a barrel. Those gains helped prices rebound from a near $2 fall on Friday, which took oil to its lowest close in...
  • Oil under $65 as demand declines ($64.46/bbl)

    09/16/2005 2:48:32 AM PDT · by RWR8189 · 47 replies · 887+ views
    Reuters ^ | September 16, 2005 | Felicia Loo
    SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Oil eased further below $65 on Friday on fears that record high prices are undermining global demand, overshadowing nagging worries about refined fuel supplies in the United States, the world's top consumer. U.S. light crude was trading down 26 cents at $64.49 a barrel by 0515 GMT, extending a loss of 34 cents on Thursday. London Brent crude slipped 16 cents to $63.50 a barrel. U.S. prices have fallen sharply from a record high $70.85 on August 30, just a day after Hurricane Katrina hit the U.S. Gulf Coast, toppling oil platforms and shutting down refineries. Oil's...
  • Lawrence Kudlow: Not That ’70s Show

    09/07/2005 2:45:52 PM PDT · by RWR8189 · 7 replies · 640+ views
    Creator's Syndicate ^ | September 7, 2005 | Lawrence Kudlow
    The story of Hurricane Katrina is first and foremost a tale of the wrath of Mother Nature and the resulting human misery: thousands of deaths, destroyed homes and businesses, family break-ups, psychological demoralization, and other hardships too painful to recount. But Katrina is also an economic story in terms of its impact on U.S. commerce, trade, energy, shipping, and overall growth. Here the doomsayers and pessimists are once again going to be proven wrong. This is not the 1970s.After more than twenty years of deregulation the U.S. economy is flexible and resilient -- even in the face of short-run shocks.Consider...