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from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
Oil nears $123 on $200 oil
prediction, supply concerns
By JOHN WILEN, AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Oil futures blasted to a new record near $123 a barrel
Tuesday, gaining momentum as investors bought on a forecast of much
higher prices and on any news hinting at supply shortages. Retail gas
prices edged lower, but appear poised to rise to new records of their
own in coming weeks.
A new Goldman Sachs prediction that oil prices could rise to $150 to
$200 within two years seemed to motivate much of Tuesday's buying,
although a falling dollar and increasing concerns about declining crude
production in Mexico and Russia contributed, analysts say.
The Energy Department raised its oil and gasoline price forecasts, but
also predicted that high prices will cut demand more than previously
thought.
Light, sweet crude for June delivery jumped to a new record of $122.73 a
barrel before retreating to settle up $1.87 at a record $121.84 on the
New York Mercantile Exchange.
Oil prices have nearly doubled from about $62 a barrel a year ago, which
Goldman sees as a sign that the world is in the midst of a "super spike"
in oil prices. Analyst Arjun Murti said in a research note released
Monday that prices would ultimately force demand to fall sharply.
Not everyone shares Goldman's view. Tim Evans, an analyst at Citigroup
Inc., countered Goldman's analysis with a note predicting that crude
prices could as easily fall to $40 a barrel as rise to $200 over the
next two years because supplies are, as Evans put it, comfortable.
James Cordier, president of Tampa, Fla., trading firms Liberty Trading
Group and OptionSellers.com, said Goldman's prediction isn't necessarily
new: "We've heard numbers like these out of Goldman Sachs, especially
over the last 12 months."
Indeed, it's not the first time Murti has espoused a super spike theory;
in an April 2005 note, he predicted the oil market was in the early
stages of an unprecedented rally that would send prices from a
then-record of about $57 a barrel to $105.
But some investors respond to such predictions by buying, Cordier said.
Meanwhile, in a monthly report, the Energy Department's Energy
Information Administration predicted oil prices will average $110 a
barrel this year, up $9 from last month's forecast. The EIA also said
high prices will cut U.S. demand for petroleum products by 330,000
barrels a day this year; last month, the EIA predicted U.S. petroleum
consumption would fall by 210,000 barrels a day.
But strong demand for oil from countries such as China, India, Russia,
Brazil and in the Middle East will support high prices and keep global
oil demand growing by about 1.2 million barrels a day this year,
unchanged from last month's forecast, the EIA said.
A falling dollar on Tuesday also gave traders reason to buy. Investors
often buy commodities such as oil as a hedge against inflation when the
dollar falls, and a weaker greenback makes oil cheaper to investors
overseas. Many analysts feel the dollar's protracted decline is the real
reason oil prices have nearly doubled since last year.
Cordier said investors are also increasingly concerned about falling oil
production in Russia and Mexico, which are major oil producers. And
prices are still supported by concerns about supply disruptions in
Nigeria, where production at a Royal Dutch Shell PLC facility was cut
after a weekend attack, and in Iraq, where Kurdish rebels warned they
could launch suicide attacks against American interests to punish the
U.S. for sharing intelligence with Turkey after Turkey bombed rebel
bases in Iraq on Friday.
At the pump, meanwhile, the national average price of a gallon of
regular gas slipped 0.1 cent overnight to $3.61, according to AAA and
the Oil Price Information Service. Analysts are split over how high gas
will go; while prices have slipped lower since May 1, leading some
analysts to say gas is close to peaking, others predict the fuel will
follow oil's upward surge.
"You're going to see new highs for gas prices, probably for the
weekend," said Cordier, who predicts an average price of $4 a gallon in
the coming weeks.
In its report, the EIA said gas prices will peak at a monthly average of
about $3.73 a gallon in June, about 13 cents higher than its previous
forecast.
In other Nymex trading Tuesday, June gasoline futures rose 5.26 cents to
settle at $3.1055 a gallon after earlier setting a new trading record of
$3.126. June heating oil futures rose 4.7 cents to settle at $3.3535 a
gallon after rising to their own trading record of $3.3712, and June
natural gas futures fell 2.8 cents to settle at $11.15 per 1,000 cubic
feet.
In London, June Brent crude futures rose $2.18 to settle at $120.31 a
barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.
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