Oil Climbs Above $142 On Sliding Dollar

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JOHN WILEN | June 27, 2008 04:53 PM EST | AP

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NEW YORK — Oil futures climbed to a new record near $143 a barrel Friday as the dollar weakened against the euro, confirming expectations that the falling greenback, a major factor in crude's stratospheric rise, will extend its decline and add to oil's appeal.

Retail gas prices inched lower overnight, but are likely to resume their own trek into record territory now that oil futures have broken out of the trading range where they had been for nearly 3 weeks.

Light, sweet crude for August delivery rose as high as $142.99 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange before pulling back sharply in a spate of late-day profit-taking to settle up 57 cents at a record $140.21. On Thursday, the contract shot past $140 and rose more than $5 to a new settlement record.

The latest record came as the dollar fell against the euro in afternoon trading, having traded roughly unchanged for much of the day.

"The dollar was slightly stronger, and when it gave up its gains, that gave oil the green light," said James Cordier, president of Tampa, Fla.-based trading firms Liberty Trading Group and OptionSellers.com.

The market now believes the Federal Reserve is unlikely to raise interest rates in the near future; since higher rates tend to strengthen the dollar, traders are anticipating that it will continue to fall and, consequently, that investors will keep turning to commodities including oil as a hedge against inflation.

"Oil's back in favor, especially with people bailing out of the stock market," said Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Ill.

The stock market's recent swoon is also sending investors in search of higher-yielding investments. On Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average fell nearly 360 points, and in afternoon trading Friday was down more than 100 points.

"When money has nowhere to go, it is parked in commodities as it is one of the few investment instruments that actually rises the more money you pour into it," said Oliver Jakob, an analyst at Petromatrix Gmbh, in Switzerland in a note.

With oil over $140 a barrel, traders are now expecting to see $145 and even $150, analysts say.

At the pump, meanwhile, gas prices slipped 0.1 cent overnight to a national average of $4.066 a gallon, according to a survey of stations by AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express. Gas prices have fallen slightly from their June 16 record of $4.08 a gallon, but will likely resume their record breaking rise if oil futures keep trending higher.

That seems likely. Oil has more than doubled in the past year due to the dollar's decline, but also because of rising global demand, particularly in fast-growing economies such as China and India. Supply outages in the Middle East and Nigeria have also contributed, as has falling production in Mexico.

The sharp increase in oil prices has driven a similar rise in fuel prices. Gas prices are $1.09 higher than a year ago, and diesel prices were up $1.85 over the past year at a national average of $4.763 a gallon on Friday. Diesel is used to fuel most industrial vehicles, trucks, trains and ships, and its increase is a large part of the reason food and consumer goods prices are rising, putting additional pressure on consumers already paying $4 and more for gas. Diesel prices peaked at $4.797, also on June 16, but are likely to push past that record if oil futures keep rising.

In other Nymex trading Friday, July gasoline futures fell 1.01 cents to settle at $3.5012 a gallon after earlier rising to a trading record of $3.585. July heating oil futures rose 2.32 cents to settle at $3.9066 a gallon. August natural gas futures fell 5 cents to settle at $13.198 per 1,000 cubic feet.

In London, Brent crude futures rose 48 cents to settle at $140.31 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

____

AP Business Writer David McHugh in London contributed to this report.

 
 

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- Wingit See Profile I'm a Fan of Wingit permalink

Bernake and the Bush administration have been in a "deer in the headlights" position for months now. The false idea that you can keep interest rates at 2% with the tremendous amount of debt that this country has is an impossible task. The result: stagflation. Economy going down while prices going up. There is only one solution at this point. Raise interest rates. This will further put us in recession, but it will have to be done sooner or later. When interest rates go up the dollar strengthens.
When you go to the gas pump, the grocery store, or anywhere else, the dollar you pull out of your wallet is only worth around 65 cents. If your dollar was worth a real dollar that $4.00 gallon of gas would cost around $2.60 a gallon. Long term solution: drill to get more oil 10 years from now. Quick solution: take the pain of a deeper recession; get a stronger dollar and lower prices. Then start to fix another disaster created by Bush trying to kick the ball down the road and unloading the problem on the next administration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 07/02/2008
- StephenJK See Profile I'm a Fan of StephenJK permalink

Here's something to look forward to as oil continues to skyrocket:

A lot of ghost towns future generations will be able to visit and a booming tourist industry about the "quaint nature" of the old relic; small business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 PM on 06/30/2008
- Ramirez See Profile I'm a Fan of Ramirez permalink

From Jerry Pournelle:

"Five years ago we were told that increased refinery and oil pumping capability in the US would do no good because it would take five years for those to affect gas pump prices. Query: if we had greatly increased supply over the past five years, would not oil be at about $75/bbl, still high, but not headed to $200? And if we do nothing to increase supply now, where will oil go? . . . We are in a time of national emergency, but it does not affect the politicians, who continue business as usual."

http://www.jerrypournelle.com/mail/2008/Q2/mail524.html#Saturday

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 06/29/2008
- Steve13133 See Profile I'm a Fan of Steve13133 permalink

At least this article mentioned the fact that the price increase of oil is the fault of the weakness of the dollar. Someone finally got it right. Seeing as the dollar lost half it's value compared to the Euro over the last 8 years of Government overspending, it's no suprise that now you have to pay twice the price for commodities (like gas, bread, milk, etc). Those commodities that haven't doubled in price yet will get there eventually. This is the hidden tax that the Paulistas were talking about - inflation. Thanks to our ever so wonderful Congress spending like a bunch of sailors on shore leave with credit cards, and the Great Wizards of the Fed (a private, for-profit organization) loaning Congress all it wants at taxpayer expense, we now have a dollar with only half the buying power of 8 years ago. Perhaps Congress will learn responsibility when the value of the not-so-mighty greenback is on par with the Mexican Peso.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 07/02/2008
- KillTheMessenger See Profile I'm a Fan of KillTheMessenger permalink

Jerry who? What does he know? Not much, if he has to start a sentence with "five years ago we were told...". Who cares what you were told? Do you? The refinery utilization statistics can be found here:

http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/mopueus2m.htm

As you can see, refinery utilization had a high in 1997 and 1998 and is falling ever since. What do you want to build refineries for? To waste money on facilities we don't need?

Increase supply? Where would the oil come from? Care to look at supply in non-OPEC countries peaking? Care to explain why we should increase our dependence on OPEC countries?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:31 PM on 06/29/2008
- StephenJK See Profile I'm a Fan of StephenJK permalink

Anyone with a brain knows that the strawman argument about "more refining capacity" was a steaming pile of cow flop. They've LONG deserted THAT notion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 06/30/2008
- StillAmused See Profile I'm a Fan of StillAmused permalink

Reposted as a public service --

Duhhh... Part 1
============

"Perhaps 60% of today"s oil price is pure speculation"

by F. William Engdahl
Global Research, May 2, 2008

"... given the unchanged equilibrium in global oil supply and demand over recent months amid the explosive rise in oil futures prices traded on Nymex and ICE exchanges in New York and London it is more likely that as much as 60% of the today oil price is pure speculation. No one knows officially except the tiny handful of energy trading banks in New York and London and they certainly aren"t talking."

"... By purchasing large numbers of futures contracts, and thereby pushing up futures prices to even higher levels than current prices, speculators have provided a financial incentive for oil companies to buy even more oil and place it in storage. A refiner will purchase extra oil today, even if it costs $115 per barrel, if the futures price is even higher."

"As a result, over the past two years crude oil inventories have been steadily growing, resulting in US crude oil inventories that are now higher than at any time in the previous eight years. The large influx of speculative investment into oil futures has led to a situation where we have both high supplies of crude oil and high crude oil prices.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8878

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:37 AM on 06/29/2008
- StillAmused See Profile I'm a Fan of StillAmused permalink

Duhhh... Part 2
===========

Speculation & Oil Prices
By Jonathan Taplin - May 14, 2008, 7:39PM

I have maintained for a while that oil prices (and perhaps other commodities as well) are being driven higher not by the laws of supply and demand, but by the moves of speculators. This morning the Dow Jones news-wire reported the following.

"OPEC member Iran is storing about 25 million barrels of heavy crude oil in tankers in the Persian Gulf. The country expects to move the stored crude by the end of the second quarter or early in the third quarter, an official from the National Iranian Oil Co. said Wednesday."

In other words, there is so little demand that they have completely used up their on shore storage capacity and don't expect to clear this inventory until October. Clearly it is time for Senator Byron Dorgan's Bill to raise commodity margin requirements. All of this talk from our President and others about third world growth being responsible for dramatically higher commodity prices is nonsense.

It's his old friends in the trading pits that are responsible for creating yet another bubble. Is it possible that our new reliance on finance (as opposed to production) as the engine of our economy requires us always to create speculative bubbles? First Internet stocks, then housing, now commodities.

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/05/14/speculation_oil_prices/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 AM on 06/29/2008
- KillTheMessenger See Profile I'm a Fan of KillTheMessenger permalink

25 million barrels in tankers? That's 30 hour worth of US supply, maybe eight hours worth of world supply. And from what I have heard the only surplus Iran has is very heavy sour crude that nobody wants to buy. So that doesn't help. If the tankers are sitting around as storage it means we have overbuilt our tanker fleet. What a waste of money.

Why is more demand good? To increase our dependence on Iran??? Wow... there's a junkie thought.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 PM on 06/29/2008
- goldenshaman See Profile I'm a Fan of goldenshaman permalink

All bubbles eventually burst.

The oil bubble and food bubble will not last any more than any other bubble has lasted.

Some big chunk of money will decide to get out and then everyone else will get left holding the bag.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 06/29/2008
- UncleHomer See Profile I'm a Fan of UncleHomer permalink

Will that be tomorrow? Because the commodities futures market is hurting the US and the rest of the world today with record oil prices and higher food prices. By closing loopholes, instituting stricter accountability and oversight congress could change that next week.

By the way, I'm sure you guys already saw this and Huffi probably even did a story on it. But I did not know one of the real reasons John McCain voted against the recent farm bill was because language in it could be used to close some of the loopholes used by the futures market to drive up prices.

http://www.baltimorechronicle.com/2008/051908Leopold.shtml

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 AM on 06/29/2008
- KillTheMessenger See Profile I'm a Fan of KillTheMessenger permalink

UncleHomer, you are betting on the wrong horse. The only things that are going to happen if we close loopholes is that the trading will go to places like Dubai and if prices should fall significantly, KSA will declare that the market is oversupplied and cut back their production. Demand from China will start rising faster again, eating up any and all gains that can be had from legal restrictions on trading in months, maybe weeks.

This is a structural problem and the only solution is to reduce demand. That's called conservation and smart people tried to urge the not so smart ones to conserve decades ago. Now you are reaping the fruits of the tree of shortsightedness that you planted so long ago.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 06/29/2008
- HotATL See Profile I'm a Fan of HotATL permalink

Didn"t we just have truck drivers striking a couple of weeks ago because gas prices were so high? I wonder how long it"s going to before they have a nation wide strike.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 PM on 06/28/2008
- KillTheMessenger See Profile I'm a Fan of KillTheMessenger permalink

In Europe? Truck drivers strike every year. They always get something in return to go back to work. It's a typical case of "Go home people. There is nothing to see here.".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 06/28/2008
- UncleHomer See Profile I'm a Fan of UncleHomer permalink

I think this might be a slight underestimation of what is happening here and might happen in the not two distant future. First we might put truckers into two different categories; independents and company. Trucks amount to about 70% of the total goods moved in this country. Tuckers working for a company do not have to worry about the cost of fuel but the company does and must pass any increases onto their customers and eventually the consumers.

Independent truckers however don't have that luxury, and while a strike might not work, although it would definitely really hurt some products, their alternative is to go out of business. Either way it would ultimately mean much higher prices for consumers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 AM on 06/29/2008
- kae See Profile I'm a Fan of kae permalink

Americans need to pay attention and be alert in times of crisis - sounds silly but look what Washington has done to the constitution post-9/11. Take Take Take.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Enron's hucksters staged that fake electricity crisis to gouge California while pushing back the transition to a green-powered economy. Now Enron II, the gas price crisis, is about gouging the whole nation. And about yet again postponing a community-owned, green-powered future."

http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/printer_3406.shtml

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 06/28/2008
- danoj See Profile I'm a Fan of danoj permalink

Dems have been in control of congress for how long and have done nothing about oil prices. Let Obama keep saying no more drilling, a sure loser topic for Dems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 06/28/2008
- UncleHomer See Profile I'm a Fan of UncleHomer permalink

I don't think Obama or anyone else is saying no more drilling. The question is should we allow drilling in environmentally sensitive areas when we would see absolutely no benefit from it for five to ten years. We could actually be switched over to alternative fuel sources in that amount of time which we will have to do eventually anyway and should have 40 years ago and we could have avoided the crisis we are in now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 AM on 06/29/2008
- heal57 See Profile I'm a Fan of heal57 permalink

Drilling is NOT the answer. Conserving and alternate fuel. Hybrid cars can be converted to plug in battery operated; plug in overnight. The technology is here. My husband and I will convert our hybrid suv within a year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 AM on 06/29/2008
- Sundialsvc4 See Profile I'm a Fan of Sundialsvc4 permalink

Henry Kissinger's sweet-deal treaty is a dead dodo.

(Too bad I can't actually yet say that about Henry himself.)

It is simply not possible anymore for the United States Dollar, nor any currency at all, to be "the only currency that can be used to buy oil."

Such an arrangement is ... patently insane. And it always has been.

Eventually, eventually, this will happen:
THE LONE RANGER: "Tonto! We're surrounded by bezillions and bezillions of Injuns!"
TONTO: "Whaddaya mean 'we,' Paleface?"

(I mean, like, du-uhhh, it WILL happen. Okay, "it will happen.")

And when it DOES happen, **bink!** the "Magical Money Machine" that's right now spewing out more than $1 million a minute in "we just borrow 'em from ourselves" Dollars will be ... unplugged.

(Hey, it happened to the British Pound-Sterling too, and THEY survived somehow.)

There will be howling and gnashing of teeth and undoubtedly the explosion of many bombs, but this behavior by the United States has long-ago become abusive and destructive to everything that could possibly be called "peace." Hurry up, world... pull that damned plug. Maybe then we can ALL figure out how to "live" again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 06/28/2008
- nomadicexpat See Profile I'm a Fan of nomadicexpat permalink

China is putting 9mm new cars on the road every year, you dont think that will continue to push oil prices higher?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 AM on 06/28/2008
- heal57 See Profile I'm a Fan of heal57 permalink

Japan has a very small car [two seater] that runs on water. Don't believe the crap you must have oil to run a car. There's a 6 month wait for the Toyota Prius. We have an '06 suv hybrid we will convert to electric battery next year.[plug in our garage ovrnight] The technology is out and getting even better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 AM on 06/29/2008
- AllenD See Profile I'm a Fan of AllenD permalink

I heard that India is producing a little "beer can" with four tires and a motor that sells for about $2,400. Demand is going ballistic in the developing world and supply is flat to declining. the end of cheap oil is over. The sooner we get serious about conservation and using alternatives, the better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 PM on 06/28/2008
- KillTheMessenger See Profile I'm a Fan of KillTheMessenger permalink

Weirdly enough many people don't get it. If one knows the Chinese psyche even a bit one has to understand that they will pay $10/gallon to drive, if they can afford it. Chinese friends of mine made that very clear to me. And if you ever happen to visit Singapore, you will see the proof. That country has a 100% import tax on cars, which effectively doubles the price of a car. It has approx. 25 miles worth of highways and there is nowhere to drive to that one can't go to in a cab for $10-15. And yet, you will see more Lamborghinis, Ferraris and Porsches on the road than anywhere else than maybe with exception of places like Monaco.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 PM on 06/28/2008
- UncleHomer See Profile I'm a Fan of UncleHomer permalink

I was wondering if you have read this. You seem very knowledgeable to me and I wonder what you think about this analysis.

http://inhome.rediff.com/money/2008/jun/02mrv.htm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 PM on 06/28/2008
- StillAmused See Profile I'm a Fan of StillAmused permalink

So much left yet to steal... and so little time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 AM on 06/28/2008
- SixBillionPlus See Profile I'm a Fan of SixBillionPlus permalink

Here's an idea
Instead of congress making funnies by call oil execs beforethem, let's do something really fun.
Let's RATION GAS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 PM on 06/27/2008
- KillTheMessenger See Profile I'm a Fan of KillTheMessenger permalink

That would be cool. I want to ride my bicycle on the highway like they did in 1973.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 06/28/2008
- GoreSavingPlanetForJesus See Profile I'm a Fan of GoreSavingPlanetForJesus permalink


When I saw Al Gore buy a half million $dollars in Occidental Petroleum stock a few years back, I knew something big was about to happen. A guy that says he hates Big Oil, buys a ton of oil stock? Hello! Prices are about to go up.

The increase in my retirement funds due to the increase in oil prices is great.

I think I might retire sooner that I had anticipated.

(I'll never have the $663 million dollars John Kerry is worth, but retiring early is good enough for me).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 PM on 06/27/2008
- FatherWolf See Profile I'm a Fan of FatherWolf permalink

Look up Friedrich Engels.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:54 PM on 06/28/2008