Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Crude Oil, Gasoline Climb to Records on U.S. Inventory Decline

April 9. 2008 Crude oil inventories fell 3.15 million barrels to 316 million last week, the Energy Department said. A 2.3-million- barrel gain was forecast, according to a Bloomberg News survey. Metals futures also rose as the dollar fell against the euro, and gasoline pump prices reached a record average $3.343 a gallon.

``This reaction to the DOE numbers suggests that the supply and demand fundamentals are still important,'' said Adam Sieminski, Deutsche Bank's chief energy economist in Washington. ``It's not just the speculators that are driving prices higher.''

``Speculation is the main reason driving up oil prices,'' Qatari Energy Minister Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiyah said today in Beijing. ``OPEC so far doesn't have anything on the agenda for the informal meeting in Rome.''

OPEC Meeting

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will hold its next formal policy-setting conference in September. Many OPEC ministers will hold informal discussions during a conference in Rome on April 20-22. The group's 13 members produce more than 40 percent of the world's oil.

``OPEC has lost control of the oil market to institutional investors who are looking for a sanctuary from the weak dollar and slowing economy,'' said Richard Chimblo, manager of global business development at Calgary-based Genoil Inc. ``I believe the bubble will break and prices are going to fall to the $85 area before the winter heating season.''

Oil's 81 percent gain during the past year ( asr: APR 2007- APR 08?) is the second biggest among 19 commodities on the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index, trailing only wheat, which doubled. Rising global demand for raw materials and a weakening dollar have led to record prices this year for raw materials including corn, rice, gold and platinum.

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