Oil prices post first rise in week
Sunday, 28 December 2008
NEW YORK, Dec 27 (AFP): World oil prices rose yesterday for the first time this week amid reports the United Arab Emirates will cut production in line with an OPEC output cutback decision.
In thin post-Christmas trading, New York's main contract, light sweet crude for February delivery, rose to 37.71 dollars, up 2.36 dollars from Wednesday's closing price. Markets were closed for Christmas on Thursday.
The New York contract has been sliding over the past nine trading sessions.
Brent North Sea crude for February delivery, which traded on London's InterContinental Exchange, was up 1.76 dollars to 38.37 dollars after settling Wednesday at 36.61 dollars, its lowest since July 2004.
"About the only market moving news over the holiday break is that after the United Arab Emirates joined Saudi Arabia in deepening supply curbs in compliance with OPEC's recent decision to limit supply," said Mike Fitzpatrick of MF Global.
"Even though these are the deepest ever cuts attempted by the group, past attempts have only met with, at best, 80 per cent compliance," he said.
UAE said it would cut output to comply with OPEC's supply curbs.
The market rebounded on the production cutback news, said James Williams of WTRG Economics.
"Even if the market believed in the ability of OPEC to implement its own quotas, the market remains concerned" about the sharp global economic slowdown stemming from financial turmoil, he cautioned.
Last week, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) agreed to cut output by 2.2 million barrels per day at a meeting in Oran, Algeria.
The meeting came after the price of crude oil in New York plunged below 34 dollars a barrel as the market digested news of the record cutback even before the announcement.
Analysts have said that recent US data showing that the world's biggest economy remains mired in a recession was likely to keep crude oil prices under pressure in the immediate term.
The price of crude oil has now collapsed by as much as 78 per cent since hitting record highs above 147 dollars per barrel in July, as a sharp global downturn has slashed the world's demand for energy.
In thin post-Christmas trading, New York's main contract, light sweet crude for February delivery, rose to 37.71 dollars, up 2.36 dollars from Wednesday's closing price. Markets were closed for Christmas on Thursday.
The New York contract has been sliding over the past nine trading sessions.
Brent North Sea crude for February delivery, which traded on London's InterContinental Exchange, was up 1.76 dollars to 38.37 dollars after settling Wednesday at 36.61 dollars, its lowest since July 2004.
"About the only market moving news over the holiday break is that after the United Arab Emirates joined Saudi Arabia in deepening supply curbs in compliance with OPEC's recent decision to limit supply," said Mike Fitzpatrick of MF Global.
"Even though these are the deepest ever cuts attempted by the group, past attempts have only met with, at best, 80 per cent compliance," he said.
UAE said it would cut output to comply with OPEC's supply curbs.
The market rebounded on the production cutback news, said James Williams of WTRG Economics.
"Even if the market believed in the ability of OPEC to implement its own quotas, the market remains concerned" about the sharp global economic slowdown stemming from financial turmoil, he cautioned.
Last week, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) agreed to cut output by 2.2 million barrels per day at a meeting in Oran, Algeria.
The meeting came after the price of crude oil in New York plunged below 34 dollars a barrel as the market digested news of the record cutback even before the announcement.
Analysts have said that recent US data showing that the world's biggest economy remains mired in a recession was likely to keep crude oil prices under pressure in the immediate term.
The price of crude oil has now collapsed by as much as 78 per cent since hitting record highs above 147 dollars per barrel in July, as a sharp global downturn has slashed the world's demand for energy.