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Oil prices rise on lower inventories
OIL prices rose yesterday after a government report showed a dramatic drop in US crude supplies.
Benchmark crude rose US$1.43 to finish at US$98.67 a barrel in New York. Brent crude was up 98 cents, ending at US$107.71 a barrel in London.
Oil inventories typically fall at the end of the year because refiners draw down their inventories for tax reasons, but yesterday's drop was far larger than analysts expected.
The Energy Information Administration said yesterday that inventories fell by 10.6 million barrels. Analysts on average forecast a drop of 2.3 million barrels, according to Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill.
Phil Flynn, an analyst at PFG Best in Chicago, said inventory declines in recent weeks have been slower than normal, so refiners were likely playing catch-up. "They are hiding it from the tax man," he said.
After the first of the year, refiners will start building up their supplies again.
Oil prices were also pushed up by better global economic news and fears that strife in some important oil-producing nations could restrict supplies.
Tensions between Iran and Western nations are rising over Iran's nuclear ambitions, raising fears that oil from the world's fourth biggest producer may be kept from reaching markets in the coming weeks.
Oil traders also are concerned about political instability in Kazakhstan, which exports about 1.3 million barrels of oil per day, about 1.5 percent of world demand. The Central Asian nation has been battling political protests that have resulted in about 15 deaths in the last month.
Encouraging news about consumer confidence in Germany, a debt auction in Spain and more housing construction in the US sent world stock markets soaring and oil prices up more than three percent on Tuesday. However, stock markets in the US and Europe fell back on worries over Europe's ongoing debt crisis yesterday. This likely stopped oil from rising even further than it did, analysts say.
In other energy trading, heating oil rose 6 cents to finish US$2.9087 per gallon, and gasoline futures rose 4 cents to end at US$2.6199 per gallon. Natural gas rose 3 cents to finish the day at US$3.1550 per 1,000 cubic feet.
Benchmark crude rose US$1.43 to finish at US$98.67 a barrel in New York. Brent crude was up 98 cents, ending at US$107.71 a barrel in London.
Oil inventories typically fall at the end of the year because refiners draw down their inventories for tax reasons, but yesterday's drop was far larger than analysts expected.
The Energy Information Administration said yesterday that inventories fell by 10.6 million barrels. Analysts on average forecast a drop of 2.3 million barrels, according to Platts, the energy information arm of McGraw-Hill.
Phil Flynn, an analyst at PFG Best in Chicago, said inventory declines in recent weeks have been slower than normal, so refiners were likely playing catch-up. "They are hiding it from the tax man," he said.
After the first of the year, refiners will start building up their supplies again.
Oil prices were also pushed up by better global economic news and fears that strife in some important oil-producing nations could restrict supplies.
Tensions between Iran and Western nations are rising over Iran's nuclear ambitions, raising fears that oil from the world's fourth biggest producer may be kept from reaching markets in the coming weeks.
Oil traders also are concerned about political instability in Kazakhstan, which exports about 1.3 million barrels of oil per day, about 1.5 percent of world demand. The Central Asian nation has been battling political protests that have resulted in about 15 deaths in the last month.
Encouraging news about consumer confidence in Germany, a debt auction in Spain and more housing construction in the US sent world stock markets soaring and oil prices up more than three percent on Tuesday. However, stock markets in the US and Europe fell back on worries over Europe's ongoing debt crisis yesterday. This likely stopped oil from rising even further than it did, analysts say.
In other energy trading, heating oil rose 6 cents to finish US$2.9087 per gallon, and gasoline futures rose 4 cents to end at US$2.6199 per gallon. Natural gas rose 3 cents to finish the day at US$3.1550 per 1,000 cubic feet.
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