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Oil rises toward US$114 a barrel as dollar falls

OIL rose to nearly US$114 a barrel in volatile trading yesterday, pushed higher by a weaker dollar, before giving up most of its early gains.

Benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude added 10 cents to settle at US$112.86 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after rising as high as US$113.97. In London, Brent crude fell 11 cents to settle at US$125.02 on the ICE Futures exchange.

The dollar recovered some ground after hitting a 16-month low against the euro on yesterday. Oil generally rises as the dollar falls, because crude is priced in dollars and becomes more appealing to buyers with foreign currencies as the dollar weakens.

The dollar dropped after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Wednesday that interest rates will stay low "for an extended period." Energy consultants Cameron Hanover said: "Traders saw his comments as being bullish for stocks (equities), commodities and foreign currencies."

At the gas pump yesterday, the U.S. average for a gallon of regular rose almost a penny, to US$3.89. That's 30 cents more than a month ago and US$1.02 more than a year ago. The average is above US$4 a gallon in eight states and the District of Columbia.

Cameron Hanover notes that the Energy Department's weekly petroleum report showed a big surge in imported oil.

"It suggests that refiners are about to get serious about increasing run rates," he said.

That means more gas will be available. Refineries have been running at lower rates for seasonal maintenance and to reformulate gasoline blends for summer driving.

The Energy Department yesterday released its weekly report on how much natural gas the nation has in storage. Supplies rose by 31 billion cubic feet. That was less than analysts expected and the price of natural gas futures contracts rose almost 3.5 percent. Energy analyst Stephen Schork noted that cooler weather in the Midwest last week had furnaces running, while warm weather in the South increased gas demand at utilities to generate electricity for cooling.

Natural gas rose 15.7 cents to settle at US$4.633 on the Nymex. In other trading, heating oil lost less than a penny to settle at US$3.2459 per gallon, and gasoline futures rose 1.14 cents to settle at US$3.3696 per gallon.




 

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