Crude Futures Rise to New High Above $57

Vance

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Oil prices rallied to a record close above $57 a barrel Friday, sparked by a surge in gasoline futures that could send the average retail cost of gasoline above $2.25 a gallon within a few weeks.

Analysts said the nearly $2-a-barrel run-up in oil prices suggested there is new money coming into the market from hedge funds and other speculators, as well as from commercial players, such as airlines and fuel distributors, that are trying to lock in prices now out of fear that the upward trend may continue.

Another factor appeared to be an investment bank report that said strong demand and tight supplies could cause a "super spike" that will push oil prices above $100 a barrel.

After climbing as high as $57.70 a barrel, a new intraday high, light, sweet crude for May delivery settled at $57.27 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, an increase of $1.87.

The previous Nymex settlement high was $56.72 a barrel, set on March 18. The previous intraday peak of $57.60 was set on March 17.

In London, Brent crude futures rose $2.22 to $56.51 a barrel on the International Petroleum Exchange.

Oil prices are now 67 percent higher than a year ago, but still well below the inflation-adjusted high above $90 a barrel set in 1980.

Oil analyst Marshall Steeves of Refco Group Inc. in New York said the rally in fuel prices is "overdone."

"I don't think the sky's the limit," Steeves said. "At some point, there'll be some impact on demand. But where that price is, is hard to determine."

At the moment, gasoline demand is up about 2 percent from a year ago and the average retail price of unleaded gasoline is $2.15 a gallon, according to the Energy Department.

On Friday, gasoline futures rose nearly 7 cents to settle at $1.731 a gallon, a Nymex record. Gasoline futures are up more than 15 cents, or 10 percent, over the past three days.

Tom Kloza, director of Oil Price Information Service, said the recent surge in gasoline futures means average U.S. pump prices are likely to rise above $2.25 a gallon within a few weeks.

However, Kloza added in an e-mail, "that's not to say that the market is acting in a justified, dignified, and appropriate manner. It hasn't been doing that for a while."

Several analysts have been critical of an extremely bullish report that Goldman Sachs distributed to the media on Thursday, saying it created unreasonable fear in the market. The report said that oil prices could go as high as $105 a barrel — the price Goldman Sachs said may be necessary to significantly curb energy consumption.

Goldman Sachs analyst Arjun Murti said factors contributing to the run-up in prices include geopolitical turmoil in oil-producing countries.

"Oil markets may have entered the early stages of what we have referred to as a 'super spike' period — a multiyear trading band of oil prices high enough to meaningfully reduce energy consumption and recreate a spare capacity cushion only after which will lower energy prices return," the report said.

Other analysts said they would expect a slowdown in demand well before that point, and that oil producing nations already have plenty of economic incentive to add more supply to the market.

Oil analyst Victor Shum of Texas-based Purvin & Gertz in Singapore said the chances of crude oil reaching $105 a barrel were slim.

"It will take a confluence of many events to happen," he said. "For example, if oil reserves in Saudi Arabia were significantly destroyed, then we could see a spike."

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures climbed 4.77 cents to settle at a record $1.6638 per gallon, while natural gas futures rose 9.6 cents to $7.749 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=sto.../20050401/ap_on_bi_ge/oil_prices&sid=84439559
 
More troubles for America.


U.S. Stocks Decline on Inflation Concerns; Shares of AIG Fall

April 1 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell as a manufacturing survey pointed to higher raw-material costs and oil prices set a record, spurring concern that inflation will accelerate.

The Institute for Supply Management's report for March, along with the rally in energy prices, sparked the selloff. Stocks gained initially after government data showed weaker-than- expected job growth last month, tempering speculation that the Federal Reserve would step up the pace of interest-rate rises.

``People are concerned about inflation and where interest rates may possibly climb,'' said Mark Bronzo, who manages $1.2 billion at Gartmore Separate Accounts LLC in Irvington, New York. ``That's holding back the stock market.''

American International Group Inc. dragged the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its lowest in almost 10 weeks. The shares had their biggest loss since October amid probes for improper accounting.

The Dow average dropped 99.46, or 1 percent, to 10,404.30, a level not seen since Jan. 24. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 7.67, or 0.7 percent, to 1172.92. The Nasdaq Composite Index retreated 14.42, or 0.7 percent, to 1984.81.

Four stocks were down for every three that gained on the New York Stock Exchange. Some 1.7 billion shares changed hands on the Big Board, 10 percent more than the three-month average.

For the week, the S&P 500 advanced 0.1 percent, the Dow average ended down 0.4 percent and the Nasdaq lost 0.3 percent. The S&P 500 yesterday closed out its worst quarter in two years, falling 2.6 percent in the January through March period.

ISM Report

The S&P 500, which climbed as much as 0.8 percent in the first 30 minutes of trading, erased its advance after the ISM prices paid index surged to 73 in March from 65.5, the biggest jump in more than a year, as manufacturers spent more on raw materials. ISM's factory index fell to 55.2 from 55.3. Readings higher than 50 indicate growth; the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey was 55.

Coupled with record oil prices, the manufacturing number fueled concerns about higher prices and overshadowed a Labor Department report that showed employers added 110,000 workers to payrolls in March, barely half the number expected by economists in a Bloomberg survey.

Crude oil for May delivery gained 3.4 percent to $57.27 a barrel in New York after touching $57.70, an all-time high. The jump came on speculation that rising demand may outpace U.S. refinery production in coming months and strain global oil supplies.

Interest Rates

The Fed has lifted its target rate by a quarter-point at each of its past seven meetings to 2.75 percent and maintained a plan to increase borrowing costs at a ``measured'' pace. Higher interest rates give investors a reason to favor bonds over stocks and increase companies' costs, crimping profit growth.

``We need to see steady growth that's not too inflationary to have rates rise on a measured basis,'' said Andy Brooks, head trader at T. Rowe Price Group Inc. in Baltimore.

The University of Michigan's preliminary confidence index for March declined for a third straight month to 92.6 from an earlier estimate of 92.9.

AIG, the world's largest insurer, had the worst performance in the Dow average, falling $4.46, or 8.1 percent, to $50.95 on concern investigators may find more accounting problems. AIG this week admitted it may have overstated net worth by as much as $1.7 billion.

It has retreated 29 percent since Feb. 14, when AIG received subpoenas from New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and the Securities and Exchange Commission, erasing more than $51 billion of market value.
 
"average retail cost of gasoline above $2.25 a gallon within a few weeks. "

Here in Las Vegas, it's $2.35 per gallon of REGULAR UNLEADED so next week, that would be $2.50 per gallon. :-( Gas prices are way too high in Las Vegas and has always been due to its remote location from oil refineries.

-jeff
 
netrox said:
"average retail cost of gasoline above $2.25 a gallon within a few weeks. "

Here in Las Vegas, it's $2.35 per gallon of REGULAR UNLEADED so next week, that would be $2.50 per gallon. :-( Gas prices are way too high in Las Vegas and has always been due to its remote location from oil refineries.

-jeff
Where I live, it costs me $2.57 for regular unleaded gas. In Europe, it costs apprx $5 and up but still, it does not affect them as much as it does for us, Americans because of their wonderful transportation system. Lucky bastards.
 
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