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Oil falls below US$109 a barrel

The price of oil fell below US$109 a barrel yesterday, easing off its two-year high as momentum for an attack on Syria appeared to slow.

Oil "is really going up and down with Syria," said Paul Christopher, Chief International Strategist at Wells Fargo Investors. Concern of an imminent attack against Syria, "seem to have abated."

New hurdles appeared to be slowing the formation of an international coalition to undertake a military strike against the Arab nation, which is suspected of a chemical weapons attack. Russia blocked British efforts to force a resolution at the United Nations. British Prime Minister David Cameron said his country would wait to join any military efforts until a UN chemical weapons inspection team releases its findings.

The price of oil has surged 26 percent since touching a low for the year of US$86.68 on April 17. It has jumped because of political unrest in Egypt and the threat of US intervention in Syria's civil war. Neither country is a major oil exporter, but traders are concerned that the violence could spread to more important oil-exporting countries or disrupt major oil transport routes.

US benchmark oil for October delivery rose US$1.09, or 1 percent, to US$110.10 a barrel on Wednesday, driven higher by the prospect of Western military intervention in Syria's civil war. The price was oil's highest closing level since May 3, 2011.

Yesterday when an attack seemed less imminent, oil fell US$1.30, or 1.2 percent, to US$108.80 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

A rise in US crude inventories helped lower the price.

The Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said crude stockpiles for the week ended Aug. 23 climbed by 3 million barrels to 362.1 million barrels. Analysts had expected a slight fall.

Rising supplies tend to hold oil prices down.

Oil was also pushed lower by a stronger dollar, which makes crude priced in dollars more expensive and a less attractive investment for traders using other currencies. Yesterday the euro was down to US$1.3244 from US$1.3340 late Wednesday in New York.

Brent crude, the benchmark for international crudes, fell US$1.06 cents to US$115.38 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other energy futures trading on Nymex:

— Heating oil lost 2.3 cents to US$3.19 per gallon.

— Natural gas rose 3.6 cents to US$3.62 per 1,000 cubic feet.

— Wholesale gasoline fell 3.10 cents to US$2.93 per gallon.




 

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