Middle East Business Information and Trade News Portal
Friday, January 09, 2009
Trade Jobs
 
   
  Featured Jobs of the Day
   
  Featured Jobs of the Week
   
Market Trends
 
 
Business Directory
  Search Directory
  Company Name
  Business Activity
 
 
 
   
News Categories
 

 

Results By

   
  Agriculture & Farming
Banking & Finance
Building & Construction
Capital Market
Defence & Security
Economy
Education, HR & Training
Energy, Oil & Gas
Environment & Water
Food & Catering
Government & Laws
Health
Industry
Interiors
IT & Telecommunications
Media & Promotions
Motoring
Property & Real Estate
Retail & Wholesale
Shipping & Transport
Tourism, Travel & Leisure
International News
Int. Business News
   
Tools
Country Briefings
Currency Conversion
Events
Calendar Of Events
Leisure, Lifestyle & Entertainment
 

   
   
B2B Marketplace, B2B Directory A B2B Portal for Buying & Selling Leads from worldwide importers exporters suppliers and wholesalers <more>
   
   
 
   
 
   
 
 NEWS > INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS 
 
Search for: Results per page:

Match: any search words all search words
 

Oil falls below $46 near four-year lows
Singapore
 

Oil fell below $46 a barrel to near four-year lows on Thursday, extending four consecutive days of falls as continued demand worries minimised bullish draws in US oil stocks.

Oil prices have lost more than $100 a barrel since an all-time high of $147.27 hit in July, and some 16 percent from last week, as demand is seen weakening worldwide and analysts expect it to contract this year and next.

US light crude for January delivery fell 83 cents to $45.96 a barrel by 0228 GMT, off an earlier low of $45.75, the lowest since a $45.42 low hit on Feb 10, 2005.

Oil settled down 17 cents at $46.79 on Wednesday.

London Brent crude edged down 34 cents to $45.10. 'Stabilisation in macroeconomic expectations is likely to precede any switch in oil market sentiment away from a mainly demand-side focus,' Barclays Capital said in its weekly oil data review.

Bullish oil data on Wednesday pushed prices higher during the session, when the US Energy Information Administration said crude stocks fell 400,000 barrels in the week to November 28, against an expected 1.7 million barrels build.

Distillate stocks, which include heating oil, fell 1.7 million barrels to 125 million, against a forecast for a 300,000-barrel increase, while gasoline supplies dropped 1.6 million barrels, having been expected to rise by 900,000 barrels.

But the product inventory falls came amid lower refinery utilization, which fell 1.9 percentage points to 84.3 percent of capacity last week against a predicted rise of 0.2 percentage point, showing weakening demand.

'Refiners began to cut processing rates significantly,' said Jan Stuart, economist in New York for UBS, in a report.

Worries about a deepening economic downturn resurfaced as a measure of the US service sector, which represents about 80 percent of US economic activity, slumped further than expected to a record low in November, according to the Institute of Supply Management.

The Institute said its non-manufacturing index came in at 37.3 versus 44.4 in October, and against expectations for a reading of 42.0.

Adding to the gloom, US private employers cut 250,000 jobs in November, a 7-year high, and US third-quarter labour costs were revised lower as the recession hit jobs.

Growing economic woes and falling prices have prompted oil producer group Opec to consider another round of cuts to oil output when it next meets December 17 in Algeria. - Reuters


 
Tags: |Oil |Crude |
   
 
     
 
PAGES  1 |  2 |  3 |  4 |  5 SEARCH ARCHIVES
       
 

 
Today's Poll
With the U.S.A, Western Europe and Japan now in recession, will developing economies in Asia, Africa and the Middle East experience curtailed growth?
Yes
Somehow
No
Don't know

 

 
 

Advertising | Contact | Feedback | Privacy Statement | Terms of Service | Web Feeds
Copyright (c) 2009, Al Hilal Publishing & Marketing Group