Thursday, October 22, 2009

Oil price slips after spiking to $82

World oil prices slid on Thursday on profit-taking after soaring overnight to 82 dollars per barrel, striking a one-year peak on the back of sliding US energy reserves and the weak greenback, traders said. New York's main contract, light sweet crude for December delivery, fell 1.28 dollars to 80.09 dollars a barrel. The contract had touched 82.00 dollars exactly on Wednesday -- a level last seen on October 14, 2008.
Elsewhere on Thursday, Brent North Sea crude for December delivery dipped 1.21 to 78.48 dollars, after reaching a high of 80.26 the previous day.
Both contracts had risen in value on Wednesday, lifted by a drop in US energy stocks, which was seen as a sign of improved demand in the world's biggest energy user.
Data released Wednesday by the Department of Energy showed US gasoline reserves sank by 2.3 million barrels in the week to October 16. That was more than the 800,000 barrel drop expected by most analysts.
Oil has been rising steadily in recent days, fuelled by a weak US currency, which makes dollar-priced crude cheaper for holders of stronger foreign units.
But there are doubts on whether oil prices can be sustained at levels above 80 dollars given the fragile state of the global economy, despite some signs of a recovery.
"We remain cautious about the sustainability of the oil price in the near term," analysts from the Commonwealth Bank of Australia said in a report.
Oil prices tumbled from historic highs of more than 147 dollars in July 2008 to about 32 dollars in December because of the global recession but have since risen on hopes of recovery.
Meanwhile in London on Thursday, OPEC secretary-general Abdalla Salem El-Badri said that the cartel will consider ramping up crude oil production at its next meeting in December if key conditions are met.
The cartel "will not hesitate to increase its production in December", he told reporters, adding the decision was dependent on higher oil prices, improving economic growth and no floating storage of crude.
The 12-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), whose members pump 40 percent of the world's crude oil supplies, will hold their next meeting in Luanda, Angola, on December 22.
"If these (rising) prices will continue, if we see the stocks go back to the normal level... if we see there is a real world economy growth, then I am sure our member countries will take the decision to increase the production in December in Luanda," he told a press briefing.
He added that an increase in output was conditional upon "signs of economic growth improving and no floating storage" of crude oil.
The OPEC chief was in London this week to attend Oil & Money 2009, a London conference for the world's energy industry. The two-day event drew to a close on Wednesday.


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