Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Potential Iran-Israel conflict sends oil prices up.

This is from the CBC.
The U.S. dollar decline fuels oil price increases. No doubt there is a lot of money going into oil as a hedge. There is lots of talk about curbing speculation but this article claims the basic cause of oil price increases is that demand is still high while production is not increasing to meet it. I really can't see how officials in the U.S. can do anything about speculation. There is probably even more speculation in food commodities.
Perhaps some people know more about U.S. and Israeli plans for attacking Iran than the rest of us given the supposed effect of this conflict on oil prices.



Potential Iran-Israel conflict sends oil prices up
Last Updated: Tuesday, July 1, 2008 9:06 AM ET
The Associated Press
Oil prices climbed above $142 US a barrel Tuesday amid concerns about a potential conflict between Iran and Israel and a weakening U.S. dollar.
Also on Tuesday, the International Energy Agency downsized its estimate of how much oil will reach the market. The agency said supply and demand figures will be close through the next five years, despite lower overall estimated hunger for crude as the world adjusts to record prices and cuts its consumption.
By midday in Europe, light, sweet crude for August delivery was up $2.04 US to $142.04 US a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
On Monday, the contract soared to a record $143.67 US a barrel. It later fell back to close at $140 US on reports of weakening U.S. oil demand and end-of-the-quarter profit-taking by traders.
In London, Brent crude futures rose $2.41 US to $142.24 US on the ICE Futures exchange.
"You have supply-side concerns, such as the rhetoric on Iran, that will likely keep a floor under prices," said Victor Shum, an analyst with Purvin & Gertz in Singapore. "I don't see much resistance to $150 [US], which could happen in the coming weeks."
In its Medium-Term Oil Market Report on Tuesday, the IEA said demand would rise most in developing countries, with Asia, the Middle East and Latin America accounting for nearly 90 per cent of demand growth over the next five years.
The energy agency's executive director, Nobuo Tanaka, said market fundamentals, and not speculative investments, were behind high oil prices.
'Working at full throttle'
"OPEC production is at record highs and non-OPEC producers are working at full throttle, but stocks show no unusual build," Tanaka said at the presentation of the IEA report in Madrid. "These factors demonstrate that it is mainly fundamentals pushing up the price."
Oil also rose on expectations the European Central Bank will likely raise interest rates at its next meeting on Thursday, which would help strengthen the euro against the dollar, Shum said.
As the dollar has weakened, investors have been piling into oil contracts, betting that they will gain, thereby offsetting the dollar's decline. Since the start of the year, crude has shot up nearly 50 per cent.
Traders were still anxious about tension in the Mideast after the commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guards warned that if his country is attacked, Tehran would strike back by barraging Israel with missiles and that it would control a key oil route in the Gulf.
Those comments, reported Saturday in Iran's conservative Jam-e-Jam newspaper, came after Israeli military exercise over the Mediterranean Sea that was seen as sending a message to Iran to curb its nuclear ambitions.
Iran is the world's fourth-largest oil exporter and OPEC's second-largest exporter. About 40 per cent of world oil exports pass through the Gulf.
Traders were also digesting news from the Energy Information Administration, which reported Monday that U.S. oil usage in April was lower than previously estimated, falling by 4.2 per cent to 19.768 million barrels per day from 20.631 million. That was 3.9 per cent lower than in April 2007 and the lowest level for the month in six years.
"We're starting to see demand destruction in the U.S., but in China and other developing countries, we still see demand growth," Shum said. "It could take several months before recent fuel price rises in developing countries start to slow oil demand in those places."
© The Canadian Press, 2008

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