Related News

Home » Business » Energy

Oil prices bounce back near US$86

THE price of oil rose more than 2 percent yesterday after the Federal Reserve released a report that signaled it may take further steps to lift the US economy.

China also reported strong auto sales for last month, and the US said crude supplies declined last week by a much larger amount than what analysts expected.

Benchmark US crude rose by US$1.90 to end the day at US$85.81 per barrel in New York. Brent crude, which helps set the price of imported oil, increased by US$2.26 to finish at US$100.23 per barrel in London.

The Fed yesterday released the minutes of a June meeting where it decided to extend a bond-buying program through the end of the year. The report showed that policymakers had agreed to take more aggressive steps to increase borrowing and spending.

"They left their options open for more quantitative easing," independent oil analyst Andrew Lipow said, referring to a government strategy to lower interest rates.

The US is the world's largest oil consumer, and any increase in economic activity tends to boost oil demand.

Oil prices began to rise early in the day after China's auto industry said sales jumped 9 percent in June despite a slowing economy. China has quickly become the world's biggest market for new vehicles, leading some cities to limit new registrations in hopes of controlling traffic congestion. Those limits drove customers to showrooms last month to buy cars ahead of any restrictions.

In the US, the government said oil supplies fell last week by 4.7 million barrels - triple the decline expected by analysts - as refineries cranked up production of gasoline and other refined fuels. Average oil demand also increased slightly last week.

Meanwhile, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries reported that world supplies fell last month by about 100,000 barrels per day, in part because of a large drop in production in Iran. Iranian oil production has suffered as Europe and the US work to limit its exports and force the country to scale back its nuclear program. Western nations fear Iran is building a weapon; Iran denies the claim.

In other futures trading, heating oil added 4.23 cents to finish at US$2.7618 per gallon while gasoline futures rose by 2.2 cents to end at US$2.7689 per gallon. Natural gas increased by 11.6 cents to finish at US$2.853 per 1,000 cubic feet.



 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend