Related News

Home » Business » Energy

Oil wavers below US$91 on concerns about Greece

OIL prices wavered below US$91 a barrel yesterday as the market waits to see if Greece receives a new round of international aid.

The Greek parliament must pass a new US$40 billion austerity package this week so the European Union and the International Monetary Fund release the next installment of Greece's US$156 billion bailout loan. Otherwise, the country could become the first in the euro zone to default on its debts - a potentially disastrous event that could drag down European banks and affect other financially troubled European countries.

Benchmark oil for August delivery fell 55 cents to settle at US$90.61 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It recovered some earlier losses on reports that French banks had agreed to accept slower repayment of Greece's debt.

"We're going to see a lot of nervous trading over Greece until we see a resolution," said Phil Flynn, an oil analyst at PFG Best.

Also yesterday, the Commerce Department said that US consumer spending was unchanged in May, the worst result since September 2009. When adjusted for inflation, spending dropped slightly.

Flynn said while the consumer spending report did show weakness in the US economy, traders were not surprised by the report.

"More of the focus is on Europe than it is on the US right now," he said.

In London, Brent crude for August delivery rose 87 cents to US$105.99 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Crude oil fell sharply last week after the International Energy Agency said it will make 60 million barrels available over a 30-day period, half of which will come from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

This helped extend a decline in US retail gasoline prices. The nationwide average for retail gasoline fell to US$3.57 per gallon yesterday according to AAA, Wright Express and the Oil Price Information Service. Prices have dropped 24 cents in a month.

Still, gas is 81 cents a gallon higher than a year ago, when oil was around US$78 per barrel. And some analysts said the recent decline in oil prices could be temporary.

"We doubt the world's energy supply will be solved by such a paltry sum," energy consultant Stephen Schork said in a report. "(The IEA's) move might assuage the market this summer, but it is by no means a long-term fix."

Others, however, noted that because other crude exporters like Saudi Arabia were maintaining crude output levels, supplies were likely to rise.

"The countries in the Gulf region apparently do not want to restrict production and this should mean a marked oversupply on the oil market in the coming weeks, which should push prices down further," said a commodity report from Commerzbank in Frankfurt.

Analysts also said oil prices were under pressure because speculators, seeking safer destinations for their money, have begun to back away from bets that prices will rise.

In other Nymex trading in July contracts, heating oil rose 1.25 cents to US$2.7814 a gallon while gasoline rose 2.85 cents to US$2.7444 a gallon. Natural gas futures rose 2.7 cents to US$4.256 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