THE price of oil hit an eight-month low yesterday as hopes dimmed for a solution to Europe's financial crisis.
Benchmark US crude lost US$2.52, or 3.1 percent, to end at US$77.69 per barrel in New York. That's the lowest price since Oct. 4. Oil traders also took their cue from US stock markets, which were sharply lower for most of the day.
As European leaders met in Brussels to discuss new ideas for dealing with the region's yawning debts, there were sharp divisions over the steps needed to stimulate growth in the eurozone, a region that consumes about 16 percent of the world's oil. That left analysts fearing more of the same in the three-year-old crisis.
"We're back to the same old worries that the Europeans aren't going to do anything to resolve their debt crisis," said Gene McGillian, a broker and oil analyst at Tradition Energy.
The action on Wall Street also influenced oil. Major US indices fell by more than 1 percent in afternoon trading. Europe played a part, as did downbeat US economic news, tumbling bank stocks and a drop in health care stocks after the Supreme Court approved President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.
Stocks recovered most of their losses after the energy markets closed. In electronic trading, oil rose 77 cents to US$78.46
Meanwhile, natural gas futures fell 2.7 percent as a government report showed US supplies remain unusually high. The Energy Information Administration said supplies grew by 57 billion cubic feet to about 3.06 trillion cubic feet last week. That's more than the 51 billion to 55 billion cubic feet that analysts were predicting. The US supply is about 25 percent higher than average for this time of year, the government said.
Natural gas futures fell by 7.6 cents to end at US$2.722 per 1,000 cubic feet in New York. Natural gas is less than a quarter of what it cost in 2008 and 38 percent cheaper than at the same time last year.
Analysts say traders decided to lock in profits after prices had jumped in the past several weeks. Natural gas had risen 45.5 percent since April when it hit a 10-year low at US$1.91.
"We've had a tremendous run," Schork said. "The bulls are exhausted right now."
Utilities will use some of that supply as Americans try to stay cool in the coming days. Temperatures topped 100 degrees across the central Midwest and Great Plains on yesterday. A heat wave is expected to roast much of the country with record-breaking temperatures this weekend and next week.
In other futures trading, heating oil lost 1.72 cents to end at US$2.5937 per gallon while wholesale gasoline lost 2.11 cents to US$2.5993 per gallon.
Brent crude, which is used to price oil imported into the US, fell by US$2.14 to finish at US$91.36 per barrel in London.
Source:shanghaidaily.com